crs1026
Superstar
I would tend to think of it more like extended commuter rail, that Thunder Bay is the hub of so much in its area. Many need to go there for Health Care, but there's also all the university students at Lakehead, and many other like services both for those who may commute daily, but also for those who simply want to come home on weekends, or for holidays.
Of course, the argument goes, virtually all, certainly 99.5% of all persons using T-Bay as a hub will have a car, if not two in their household as that's pretty much necessary.
I think we sometimes dwell too much on the supposed isolation of Northwestern Ontario, as if it's wilderness that has no penetrability. In terms of linkages between where people actually live, there are now as useable road and air linkages between all of the Nipigon, Thunder Bay, and Winnipeg axix as between, say, Winnipeg, Regina, and Saskatoon. Some of the roads to the outlying places may be unimproved, or weather dependent.... but is that really any more of a barrier as, say, getting to Winnipeg from Flin Flon or Lloydminster?
I would be curious whether the proportion of students attending Lakehead U who have a car available in T Bay is greater than the number who attend say U of Winnipeg.... or even Trent U or UWO. We may be assuming a need that is already met.
It's entirely compelling to me that we look to rail to link many more communities, and if the service were there I'm sure people would gravitate to it. The issue is - it would have to be an entire network build, and that goes beyond the CP main line as a backbone. It encompasses stations and first/last mile needs and existing practices for these..
And built form and amenities in those communities: I'm sure if i flew into Dryden on business, there would be ready access to rental cars or taxi's to get me around to my motel or whatever office or business I might need to visit. But if we put back a train station - it's off what has become the beaten track. Will the car rental agency serve the train station the way it is accustomed to serving the airport, for instance?
If the Canadian ran through T Bay, I'm sure it would board and let off plenty of local riders there.... as it currently does in Hornepayne and Sioux Lookoout. But (like the Peterborough discussion) that is conflating an incremental ridership on a service that has its own sustainability proposition. Whether we are ready to alter our built form in all these places to have a standalone rail network I'm not so sure.
- Paul
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