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High Speed Train Coming?-split from boosting Canada’s military spending"

I agree HT,....if folks feel like we need to put our kids another (at least) 90 billion in debt, let's at least use it to fix up things that matter to a lot more of the country, like fixing up the Trans Canada Highway from end to end.
 
I agree HT,....if folks feel like we need to put our kids another (at least) 90 billion in debt, let's at least use it to fix up things that matter to a lot more of the country, like fixing up the Trans Canada Highway from end to end.

Agreed I drive the TCH a few times a year from NS to Kingston and return. Perhaps that would be a better spend of 90 billion $$$.
 
Out off the other coast, I'd be happy with any rail, so long as it's not lethal to ride on, takes large, predictable bulk freight off the roads, provides a trunk passenger service to somewhere near most of the airports and some of the ferries, and has a commuter service, for Vic/Esq, Duncan, Nanaimo, and Courtenay at the same speeds as were provided by steam a century ago. "Catching up to post-Soviet legacy-infrastructure-heavy Eastern European services" would be aspirational at this point.

Similar services for everywhere else in the province with never-ending highway issues and projects and ever-growing populations would be lovely. Really need a new WAC Bennet and a rail-focused Gaglardi.

On reflection, I've probably posted something along these lines before!
Meanwhile CN wants to abandon the existing railline north of Squamish into the interior of BC. There is corporation pushback on that, but the current softwood crisis is not helping. Personally I would like to see the railline between Minette and Dease Lake completed. Then push it into the Yukon and link up to Alaska.
 
There's undoubtedly a lot to be done. Nobody is suggesting that this project is where it ends.

But the nature of large projects is that they have to start a decade or two in advance. Especially in this country.

The Quebec-Windsor Corridor is already choking on traffic. On top of that, airports are starting to max out. None of this gets better in 15 years. Or we simply accept stagnation for half the population and GDP of the country. If we don't want to see that in 2040, then gotta start building the alternatives now.

And I would say the same for other highly populated parts of the country like the lower Mainland. Possibly even the CalEd corridor given the way traffic is heading there.
no argument. So do you build a half a dozen lines (VR Island, lower mainland, Calgary/Edmonton, Windsor/Toronto, Toronto/Quebec via Montreal and probably an argument for one through Nova Scotia as well, or do we spend all the money and time on a single line that accommodates only the principal city dwellers in a few principal cities and ignore the rest
 
no argument. So do you build a half a dozen lines (VR Island, lower mainland, Calgary/Edmonton, Windsor/Toronto, Toronto/Quebec via Montreal and probably an argument for one through Nova Scotia as well, or do we spend all the money and time on a single line that accommodates only the principal city dwellers in a few principal cities and ignore the rest

You're assuming other lines are cheap and that the majority of cost inflation comes from the speed. In reality, significant costs and complications are land assembly and expropriation. And that's the same for all the other lines you propose. Alto is basically proof of concept here. If it doesn't get built, don't expect anything else (especially passenger rail) to ever get built.
 
You're assuming other lines are cheap and that the majority of cost inflation comes from the speed. In reality, significant costs and complications are land assembly and expropriation. And that's the same for all the other lines you propose. Alto is basically proof of concept here. If it doesn't get built, don't expect anything else (especially passenger rail) to ever get built.
In a lot of places i.e. Victoria to Nanaimo the right of way is already there. There is also a line from Halifax to Sydney, Parry Sound to Ottawa and just about any other city pair you want to choose. Alto is not proof of concept, that can be found in all of those wonderful European cities you rave about. We know HS can work but for 90 billion or probably a lot more we can link dozens of cities in short line 90 mph commuter trains without destroying villages and farms. Community is far more important than getting to Ottawa in 2 hours rather than 3
 
In a lot of places i.e. Victoria to Nanaimo the right of way is already there. There is also a line from Halifax to Sydney, Parry Sound to Ottawa and just about any other city pair you want to choose. Alto is not proof of concept, that can be found in all of those wonderful European cities you rave about. We know HS can work but for 90 billion or probably a lot more we can link dozens of cities in short line 90 mph commuter trains without destroying villages and farms. Community is far more important than getting to Ottawa in 2 hours rather than 3

Your goal is equity. Chicken in every pot. The rail version of Equalization.

HSR advocates like me want to see ridership and economic return. These are not the same.

I don't believe in throwing good money after bad. The big cities you're whining about generate 70-80% of VIA's ridership and have all the transit usage in the Corridor. I don't believe billions on rail service in rural areas (where the idea of public transport is mocked) would ever return even a fraction of the same ridership. Which in turn means, nowhere near the same economic benefit. Hell, on a recent course in Trenton we had guys walking from the train station to the base because Trenton can't sustain a cab company after hours. The Joining Instructions now tell people about this.

Put it this way. HSR has the equivalent transport capacity of 20 lanes of freeway. Regular non-grade separated rail is probably something like 6-8 lanes. Do any of the city pairs you mention even have enough traffic to even require 4 lane highways? Will any of them need that over next two to three decades based on pre-Covid population growth (which we're going back to)? HSR is being built between the big cities for rhe same reason subways are built in Toronto and not Kelowna. It's where the users are.
 
Hell, on a recent course in Trenton we had guys walking from the train station to the base because Trenton can't sustain a cab company after hours. The Joining Instructions now tell people about this.
Well, if it does go through, hopefully the folks are smarter then the people running courses at CFB Trenton.....arranging a lift for someone attending a course should not be a big deal with the resources available.
 
Well, if it does go through, hopefully the folks are smarter then the people running courses at CFB Trenton.....arranging a lift for someone attending a course should not be a big deal with the resources available.

Student went home on the weekend. Took the last train back on Sunday. Called the taxi number given by Yukon Lodge. "We don't have service tonight.". Now the JI just says, "Bring a car or plan to bum rides."

And yes, while it shouldn't be a big deal to plan rides, that is beside the point in the context of this thread. A place that can't support 24/7/365 taxi service is not one you want to invest billions of dollars of rail infrastructure into. Clearly the people who live there are fine being fully reliant on private vehicles.
 
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