Before we are starting unjust rumors: all the decommissioned sidings
@crs1026 mentioned were along the York Sub and thus far away from any third track CN built on behalf of VIA and the federal taxpayer, just like CN didn't deliberately lengthen their trains to no longer be able to fit them into sidings (they just must have figured out on a spreadsheet that lengthening trains beyond X% of its sidings was more profitable than extending these sidings).
Just to be precise, there were also sidings along the Kingston Sub, and for that matter throughout the country, built to a fairly consistent standard of 6000-7000 feet, which was as long as trains were traditionally. After the elimination of the caboose, and consistent with technological advances in distributed power (remote control of midtrain and rear of train locomotives) the entire industry found ways to make trains longer, reaping huge productivity and cost savings gains in the process. Besides not fitting in sidings, today’s longer trains handle differently, so cannot be quite as nimble as shorter trains.
One is tempted to bring up E Hunter Harrison as being a driving force in these changes. It would be fairer to say that he simply applied pressure to both CN and CP managers, who were a bit change resistant and were not in a hurry to adopt what was already proven and going on elsewhere. EHH’s particular imprint was to find ways to manage oversize trains without spending much if any capital to lengthen sidings. He may have gone too far in the short term, but both CN and CP have recalibrated and are doing what makes good economic and operational sense to restore passing capacity for longer freight trains.
The change in operating practices doomed passenger trains both on the long haul routes and in the corridor, because it removed much of the the potential for faster trains (pax) to overtake slower ones (freight).
The point being - this was not some nefarious conspiracy to harm VIA. It was an orderly evolution of the industry and was unavoidable. Certainly, government could have taken up the slack to protect passenger train capacity by pumping more money into extended sidings etc…. but there is no political appetite to do that..
Also, the only
AOG report examining the partial triple-tracking of the Kingston Sub of which I am aware simply stated that the per-mile cost almost tripled (from $1.6 to $4.5 million) as the project progressed, but (IIRC) did not directly accuse CN of anything worse than poor cost control...
Somewhere (youtube?) there was footage of interviews with a former transport official (Pickersgill) who spoke very clearly about the passenger train having no future. The reality is, rightly or wrongly, Ottawa consciously put in place the policies that gave the railways the right to treat VIA with indifference and predation. Nearsighted, certainly, but cast in a certain amount of stone. I would like to see VIA extricated from that, but it’s not as simple as just wielding a pen.
- Paul