#6 About VIA's mandate
The only thing which surprises me here is that you make this claim less than 24 hours after I've posted a table which clearly shows that you should have listened to your intuition, as the Canadian lost in 2018 (latest annual data available) $0.68 for every $1 in revenues, which is virtually identical to the losses it incurred on its entire network and one-third higher than the $0.47 it lost for every $1 in revenues on the Corridor:
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Repost (with red box added) from
previous post
Therefore, adding more trains might
not be in order, but more about that in point #9 further below.
See all the colours? Some are green, some are yellow, and some are red. Toronto to Vancouver i Yellow - Green. That is what I meant. Not the black/red thinking. We should figure out why it dropped. There is a plan to put HFR between the 2 cities that seem to have the lower ridership. Yet, it is still being suggested, and it is still a good idea. The numbers are not the whole story.
#9 About expanding transcontinental VIA services
For those of you without a CN/CP timetable archive on their HDD, "The Dominion" was CP's flagship Montreal/Toronto-Vancouver train until the introduction of "The Canadian" in 1955 (which operates until this day under the same name and fleet, but on the route of the former "Super Continental") and continued operating as a more basic alternative to The Canadian with more stops and thus slower travel times until 1966 (shown below is the October 1965 timetable):
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Yes, sure, but the only things missing are the fleet, mandate, market and funding:
- Fleet: from Skylines over Diners to (Prestige) Park cars, there are unfortunately only enough cars to form four identical trainsets (which is only sufficient to operate 3 departures per week) and even if you would accept having on-board amenities which vary greatly from one departure to the next, you would simply spread the same (finite and constrained) number of coaches and sleepers over more trainsets...
- Mandate: given that the mandates touched by this train (transcontinental service and the regional service between Sudbury and White River) are already covered adequately by existing VIA services, I don't see how such a service expansion could be justified to Transport Canada and the federal taxpayers...
- Market: Given that the current state of the infrastructure (let alone: freight traffic volumes) don't allow for a travel time (let alone: punctuality) which would make it competitive against the car (nor an inter-provincial bus service, which could be reinstated by the federal and provincial governments at rather short notice), I don't see any market which would be adequately served by the service you described above...
- Funding: Without a mandate or obvious market which this service would serve, why would any federal government commit the necessary operational funding to operate such a service?
Lets really look at those 4 things.
Fleet
Get more.
Either they locate old ones, refurbish them and put them into service.
Or....
Get new ones. You could have a manufacture, like Bombardier who likely owns the rights to the car designs, build new ones to the original designs, but have them built updated for today.
Now, you would have enough rolling stock to run it daily both ways. In fact, with building new cars, you can replace the old ones. Metal does fatigue over time. Those cars are over 50 years old. That means the metal has been under stress for 50 years. Replacing them with new, but still streamline cars would be a good way to not only increase rolling stock, but increase reliability of that rolling stock.
Mandate
en.wikipedia.org
The 4th largest metro, Calgary is not served by rail. The next largest city is the 15th one; Victoria, which actually is if they return the train to Vancouver Island. I would say that Via has not fulfilled it's mandate fully if a major city such as Calgary, with a population over 1.3 million do not have access to rail. The next city that isn't served; Victoria has a population of 350,000. That i a city 4 times as small.
Market
Bus =/= Train, or, does subway = bus? The argument for bustification is silly at best.
The Corridor is still slower than car and plane, but it is well used and well served. Why? Because it exists, and it fills a need. So, the market could be there. Again, 1.3 million not served is a fairly good market.
Ignoring Vancouver, Winnipeg and Toronto, cities over 50,000 are:
The Southern route would serve:
Calgary 1,300,000
Medicine Hat 76,000
Regina 230,000
Brandon 58,000
Thunder Bay 121,000
Sault Ste Marie 79,000
Greater Sudbury downtown station 164,000
Total: 2,028,000
The current route
Kamloops 103,000
Edmonton 1,300,000
Saskatoon 301,000
(in Greater Sudbury, it serves remote locations)
Total 1,704,000
A difference of over 324,000 This does not include the smaller places, but the southern route is more populated.
I would say a net higher population is a market that exists that is not served.
Funding
This took me about a half hour to look up and type. This clearly shows that a mandate and market do exist. What does not exist is the money, and the agreement to run on CP tracks.
I have clearly shown that which you said did not exist, for the most part does.exist. We just need a government to see this, and put it in place.