MisterF
Senior Member
Even if, for the sake of the argument, the travel times between Toronto and Montreal are the exact same as today, HFR will still be worth it. Because people will know that they'll actually get there on time instead of sitting on a siding waiting for freight trains to go by. Via Rail's on time performance has dropped to an abysmal 68%, which means that the 5:10 that it says in the schedule is starting to look pretty meaningless. Some of you guys are putting too much emphasis on trip times to Montreal while ignoring reliability, frequency, schedule convenience, and much improved travel times between every other city pair.
What happened during the Kingston subdivision project from barely a decade ago shows how futile capital spending on the CN line is. Costs ballooned, the project was scaled back, and CN kept its priority over Via trains. It was a failure, basically a gift to CN to use as they wish. Any amount of investment into a freight mainline is going to fail because the government simply isn't going to take priority from the freight companies. Simply put, passenger trains need their own route.Your explanation is quite compelling.
I would come at it from another angle: Suppose we can find whatever amount of capital the incremental Ottawa bypass would rquire, using the CP line as the straw man. Now remember that VIA is planning to also retain the Lakeshore service, with reportedly 12 trains per day west of Brockville and 6 east of there. Now remember that the whole issue with the Lakeshore line is the conflict with CN freight. 12 trains is still a lot of conflict.
I would expect that the business case for spending that available capital on the CN line to assure the performance of that Lakeshore service would exceed the business case for spending the same amount to extract a small gain in travel time on through Montreal-Toronto business.
Relaying the Winchester, at minimum, would be roughly 60 miles of new rail and ties. If the vision is to lay a new line end to end, not encroaching on CP's freight infrastructure, that's an even bigger bit of capital....25 miles of new grading plus the track itself to sidestep the remaining double track sections. All, with a huge presumption that CP will be amenable.
Spend that money on the Kingston line, and, even with a "hub" at Kingston, the performance and marketability of that service would likely deliver equal or better return. Who knows - one might even find that a couple of those 6 local trains would run right through, on a total Montreal-Toronto time as good or better than through Ottawa.
I'm not saying that will ever happen, just making the point about the return on the simplest bypass versus other uses of the money. And there are other things I can think of that would also be better uses.
- Paul
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