Bordercollie
Senior Member
If there is an election in the fall and the liberals loose, I highly doubt that the PC's would back the project. At the same time I have my doubts that Erin O'Toole will be elected Prime Minister.
If there is an election in the fall and the liberals loose, I highly doubt that the PC's would back the project. At the same time I have my doubts that Erin O'Toole will be elected Prime Minister.
If there is an election in the fall and the liberals loose, I highly doubt that the PC's would back the project. At the same time I have my doubts that Erin O'Toole will be elected Prime Minister.
What's the point of building a dead end rail line to Peterborough and then cancelling the rest of the project? If anything the whole thing would get cancelled.The announcement is coming in Trois Rivieres.
It will more than likely concern the 'first phase' of work that was funded in the budget.
Very unlikely anyone would back out of this first investment. Whether the rest of the 'project' comes to fruition is a different question, under any government.
The Minister mentions in the piece that this would have to happen (the whole of HFR) over many phases, over time. So it sounds like this, at best, will be chunked out in bite-sized pieces every year or two.
We will have to wait and see.
What's the point of building a dead end rail line to Peterborough and then cancelling the rest of the project? If anything the whole thing would get cancelled.
The concervative opposition has been dead set against the spending going on with the current government and promising to cancel projects to win votes is for sure their strategy.
Or they may sell it to private investors and let them roll with it.
So are you implying that they are planning on investing in, increasing frequencies in the existing corridor without building a new line?I'm confused by your comment.
What's likely to be announced has nothing to do with Peterborough. Its the segment of VIA's operations in Quebec (associated with the corridor).
That route is unlikely to change. It already meets the existing corridor in Ottawa.
So far as we know, there is nothing to do with Peterborough involved here.
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No one is going to build a dead-end to Peterborough. But any section of the proposed HFR route from Smith's Falls to Quebec City can be invested in without reference to the Toronto - Smith's Falls segment.
The existing corridor already gets to Smith's Falls. So you can chunk out work on that section easily.
Once you decide to proceed with the route to Smith's Falls, via Peterborough, that project has to be done mostly as one big project.
It would be possible to phase in or defer certain parts such as alternative alignments or some passing tracks; but you need a complete route, with essential passing tracks in place.
We really don't know what decisions have been taken so far; and we really do have to wait for the announcements that follow.
But what appears to the case is that the government is committing resources to sections that are easier to deliver and less expensive and can be used with or without a new routing in Ontario.
That defers the big expenses and politics to a later date.
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Because this segment doesn't involve any new route in Ontario, and is comparatively cheap, assuming a tendering process were imminent, its unlikely any future government would roll that back. Irrespective of their politics.
So are you implying that they are planning on investing in, increasing frequencies in the existing corridor without building a new line?
Or that the first step would be to build the corridor from Peterborough to Smith falls in one shot?
By phases they likely mean that they will break it out into "chunks", but not pointless sized chunks.What's the point of building a dead end rail line to Peterborough and then cancelling the rest of the project? If anything the whole thing would get cancelled.
The concervative opposition has been dead set against the spending going on with the current government and promising to cancel projects to win votes is for sure their strategy.
Or they may sell it to private investors and let them roll with it.
| ROUTE | SERVICE |
| Toronto-Kingston-Montréal | Trains 62 and 65– daily as of July 12 |
| Toronto-Kingston-Ottawa | Trains 47, 52, 54 and 59 – daily as of July 12 |
| Québec City-Montréal-Ottawa | Trains 22, 29 and 633 – daily as of July 12 |




