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Wikipedia

Via Rail

Via Rail Canada Inc. (reporting mark VIA) (/ˈvə/), operating as Via Rail or Via, is a Canadian Crown corporation that is mandated to operate intercity passenger rail service in Canada.

Via Rail Canada Inc.
Company typeCrown corporation
IndustryRail transport
FoundedJanuary 12, 1977; 47 years ago (1977-01-12)
HeadquartersPlace Ville Marie,
Montreal, Quebec
,
Canada
Area served
Canada
Key people
Françoise Bertrand (Chairman), Mario Peloquin (CEO)
Revenue CA$392.6 million (2018)[1]
CA$−272.6 million (2018)
Total assets CA$1.467 billion (2018)
OwnerGovernment of Canada
Number of employees
3,234 (2020)
Websitewww.viarail.ca/en
Geographic map of the Via Rail system
Overview
Stations called at378[2]
Reporting markVIA
Dates of operation1977–present
PredecessorPassenger services operated by the Canadian National Railway and the Canadian Pacific Railway, as well as other smaller companies
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Length12,500 kilometres (7,800 mi)

Via Rail operates over 500 trains per week across eight Canadian provinces and 12,500 kilometres (7,800 mi) of track, 97 percent of which is owned and maintained by other railway companies, mostly by Canadian National Railway (CN). Via Rail carried approximately 4.39 million passengers in 2017, the majority along the Corridor routes connecting the major cities of the Quebec City–Windsor Corridor, and had an on-time performance of 73 percent.[1] Although Via Rail was established to accommodate passenger operations from the Canadian Pacific Railway, it now mainly uses its network for tourists.[3]

History edit

Background edit

 
CNR Rapido train cars in Pickering, July 1968. In an effort to attract riders, new train cars were acquired by CN in the 1960s.

Yearly passenger levels on Canada's passenger trains peaked at 60 million during World War II. Following the war, the growth of air travel and the personal automobile caused significant loss of mode share for Canada's passenger train operators. By the 1960s Canadian National Railway (CN) and the Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) found that passenger trains were no longer economically viable. CP sought to divest itself of its passenger trains, but federal government regulators and politicians balked, forcing them to maintain a minimal service through the 1970s, with the government subsidizing up to 80 percent of losses. CN, being a Crown corporation at that time, was encouraged by the federal government and political interests to invest in passenger trains. Innovative marketing schemes such as Red, White, and Blue fares, new equipment such as scenic dome cars and rail diesel cars, and services such as Rapido and the UAC TurboTrain trains temporarily increased numbers of passengers, reversing previous declines.[4]: 4–5 

These increases proved temporary; by 1977, total passenger numbers had dropped below five million. The decline of passenger rail became a federal election issue in 1974 when the government of Pierre Trudeau promised to implement a nationwide carrier similar to Amtrak in the United States. Starting in 1976, CN began branding its passenger services with the bilingual name Via or Via CN. The Via logo began to appear on CN passenger locomotives and cars, while still carrying CN logos as well. That September, Via published a single timetable with information on both CN and CP trains, marking the first time that Canadians could find all major passenger trains in one publication. In 1977, CN underwent a dramatic restructuring when it placed various non-core freight railway activities into separate subsidiaries, such as ferries under CN Marine, and passenger trains under Via Rail which was subsequently renamed Via Rail Canada.[4]: 6–9 

Formation and early years edit

 
A Via Rail train at Cochrane station in August 1978. Earlier that year, CNR and CPR passenger rail service were spun off into Via Rail Canada.

On 12 January 1977, CN spun off its passenger services as a separate Crown corporation, Via Rail Canada. At its inception, Via acquired all CN passenger cars and locomotives. Following several months of negotiation, on 29 October 1978, Via assumed all CP passenger train operations and took possession of cars and locomotives. Passenger train services which were not included in the creation of Via Rail included those offered by BC Rail, Algoma Central Railway, Ontario Northland Railway, Quebec North Shore & Labrador Railway, various urban commuter train services operated by CN and CP, and remaining CN passenger services in Newfoundland. At this time, Via did not own any trackage and had to pay right-of-way fees to CN and CP, sometimes being the only user of rural branch lines.[citation needed]

Via initially had a tremendous variety of equipment — much of it in need of replacement — and operated routes stretching from Sydney, Nova Scotia to Prince Rupert, British Columbia and north to Churchill, Manitoba. Over 150 scheduled trains per week were in operation, including transcontinental services, regional trains, and corridor services.[citation needed]

While Via remains an independent federal Crown corporation mandated to operate as a business, it is hindered by the fact that it was created by an Order in Council and not from legislation passed by Parliament. Had Via been enabled by legislation, the company would be permitted to seek funding on the open money markets as other Crown corporations such as CN have done in the past. It is largely for this reason that critics say Via—like Amtrak in the United States—is vulnerable to federal budget cuts and continues to answer first to its political masters, as opposed to the business decisions needed to ensure the viability of intercity passenger rail service.[5]

1980s edit

 
The LRC in Port Hope, October 1981. Via Rail ordered the LRCs in the 1980s to replace its older train cars.

In 1981, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's government endorsed Minister of Transport Jean-Luc Pépin's plan which slashed Via's budget, leading to a 40 percent reduction in the company's operations. Frequently sold-out trains such as the Super Continental and the popular Atlantic were discontinued. The retrenchment of the former reduced Via to operating only one transcontinental train, The Canadian.[citation needed]

Via also sought to reduce its reliance on over 30-year-old second-hand equipment and placed a significant order with Bombardier Transportation for new high-speed locomotives and cars which would be used in its corridor trains. The LRC (Light, Rapid, Comfortable) locomotives and cars used advanced technology such as active tilt to increase speed, but proved troublesome and took several years to work out problems (by 1990 only a handful of LRC locomotives remained in service which were subsequently retired by the arrival of the GE Genesis locomotives in 2001).[citation needed]

The election of Brian Mulroney's Progressive Conservative government in 1984 brought an initial friend to Via, when several of Mulroney's commitments included rescinding the Via cuts of 1981 by restoring the Super Continental (under pressure from his western caucus), and the Atlantic (under pressure from his eastern caucus and then-Saint John mayor Elsie Wayne). Prime Minister Mulroney's government gave Via funding to refurbish some of its cars, and purchase new locomotives, this time a more reliable model from General Motors diesel division.[citation needed]

It was during this time on 8 February 1986, that Via's eastbound Super Continental collided with a CN freight train near Hinton, Alberta, as a result of the freight train crew missing a signal light, resulting in 23 deaths.

By the late 1980s, inflation and other rising costs were taking their toll on federal budgets and in the Mulroney government's 1989 budget, Via again saw its budget slashed by $1 billion,[6] surpassing even the 1981 cuts under Trudeau.

1990s edit

 
A Via GMD FP7 leads the Canadian in Regina, May 1982. The Canadian was rerouted in the 1990s, ending service to several cities, like Calgary.

Minister of Transport Benoît Bouchard oversaw the reduction in service on 15 January 1990, when Via's operations were reduced by 55 percent.[citation needed] The privatization of CN rail in 1995 also negatively affected service as it resulted in an effective monopoly, with Via trains having to yield to CN trains.[6]

Services such as the Super Continental were again discontinued, along with numerous disparate rural services such as in Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley and Cape Breton Island, western Canada, and in the corridor. The Canadian was also moved from its home rails on CP to the northerly CN route (previously plied by the Super Continental). The shift to the less populated route between Toronto and Vancouver severed major western cities such as Regina and Calgary from the passenger rail network and flared western bitterness toward the Government of Canada.[citation needed]

The official justification for the rerouting was that the trains would serve more remote communities, but the concentration of ridings held by the Progressive Conservatives along the CN route attracted the charge that the move was chiefly political. Harvie André, one of Alberta's federal cabinet ministers who represented Calgary, stated publicly that he did not care if he never saw a passenger train again in his life.[citation needed]

The Mulroney cuts allowed Via to consolidate its fleet of cars and locomotives, resulting in a fleet of refurbished stainless steel (HEP-1 and HEP-2 rebuilds) and LRC cars, as well as rationalizing its locomotive fleet with GM and Bombardier (LRC) units.[citation needed]

Via was not spared from further cutbacks in Jean Chrétien's Liberal government elected in 1993. Minister of Finance Paul Martin's first budget in 1994 saw further Via cuts which saw the popular Atlantic dropped from the schedule, focusing the eastern transcontinental service on the Ocean. CP had sold off a large portion of track the Atlantic had operated on and, as Via at that time was only mandated to provide passenger services on tracks belonging to CN or CP, the route was discontinued.[citation needed] This move was seen as somewhat controversial and politically motivated as the principal cities benefiting from the Atlantic's service were Sherbrooke, Quebec, and Saint John, New Brunswick, where the only two Progressive Conservative Party Members of Parliament in Canada were elected in the 1993 federal election in which Chrétien's Liberal Party took power. The Ocean service which was preserved currently operates on track between Montreal and Halifax running through the lower St. Lawrence River valley and northern New Brunswick. The Minister of Transport in Chrétien's government at the time, Douglas Young, was elected from a district that included Bathurst, New Brunswick, on the Ocean's route. A remote Via service to Quebec's Gaspé Peninsula, the Chaleur was also spared from being cut at this time, despite carrying fewer passengers than the Atlantic.[citation needed]

Renaissance funding edit

 
A Via locomotive leads the International with Amtrak coaches. The International route was jointly operated by Via and Amtrak from 1982 to 2004.

By the late 1990s, with a rail-friendly Minister of Transport, David Collenette, in office, there were modest funding increases to Via. Corridor services were improved with new and faster trains, a weekly tourist train, the Bras d'Or, returned Via service to Cape Breton Island for the first time since the 1990 cuts, and a commitment was made to continue operating on Vancouver Island, but western Canada continued to languish with the only service provided by the Canadian and a few remote service trains in northern BC and Manitoba.[citation needed]

In a significant new funding program dubbed "Renaissance", a fleet of unused passenger cars which had been built for planned Nightstar sleeper services between locations in the United Kingdom and Continental Europe via the Channel Tunnel were purchased and adapted following the cancellation of the Nightstar project. The new "Renaissance" cars were swiftly nicknamed déplaisance ("displeasure") by French-speaking employees and customers, due to early problems adapting the equipment for Canadian use. Doors and toilets froze in cold Atlantic Canada temperatures, resulting in delays and service interruptions.[7] New diesel-electric P42DC locomotives purchased from General Electric (GE) allowed the withdrawal of older locomotives, including remaining LRCs. LRC passenger cars were retained and continued to provide much of the Corridor service. This expansion to Via's fleet has permitted scheduling flexibility. Additionally, many passenger stations have been remodelled into passenger-friendly destinations, with several hosting co-located transit and regional bus hubs for various municipalities.[citation needed]

2000s edit

 
Via Rail P42DC pulling LRC coaches towards Montreal

On 24 October 2003, federal Minister of Transport David Collenette announced $700 million in new funding over the next five years. This funding was below the $3 billion needed to implement a high-speed rail proposal in the Quebec City-Windsor Corridor nicknamed ViaFast; however, the funding was intended to "provide for faster, more frequent and more reliable passenger service across Canada... [preserving] the option for higher speed rail, such as the Via Fast proposal," said Collenette. This new project was to be called "Renaissance II".[8]

On 18 December 2003, Liberal Prime Minister (PM) Paul Martin froze federal spending on all major capital projects, including Via's five-year $700 million "Renaissance II" program announced just six weeks earlier by outgoing PM Chrétien's administration. Critics of Martin's cuts claimed that he was in a conflict of interest as his family through Canada Steamship Lines and various subsidiary and affiliated companies had once had a significant investment in the Voyageur Colonial Bus Lines, an intercity bus line in Quebec and eastern Ontario that was a key competitor of Via.[citation needed]

Routes cut under the Martin government included the seasonal Bras d'Or tourist train, which ran for the last time in September 2004, and the Montreal-Toronto overnight Enterprise, which was discontinued in September 2005. The Sarnia-Chicago International was also discontinued in April 2004 by Amtrak. Via's portion of the route from Toronto-Sarnia remained in operation as Via was able to use their own equipment to operate the train.[citation needed]

Sponsorship scandal edit

The federal Auditor General's report released on 10 February 2004 showed what appeared to be a criminal misdirection of government funds intended for advertising to key Quebec-based supporters of the Liberal Party of Canada. Included in the Auditor General's report was the fact that Via was used as one of several federal government departments, agencies, and Crown corporations to funnel these illicit funds. Forced to act on the Auditor General's report due to its political implications, Martin's government suspended Via President Marc LeFrançois on 24 February 2004, giving him an ultimatum of several days to defend himself against allegations in the report or face further disciplinary action.[citation needed]

Several days later during LeFrançois's suspension, former Via marketing department employee Myriam Bédard claimed she had been fired several years earlier when she questioned company billing practices in dealing with advertising companies. (According to CBC News, an arbitrator's report later concluded that Bédard had voluntarily left Via.) She was publicly belittled by Via CEO Jean Pelletier in national media on 27 February 2004. Pelletier retracted his statements but on 1 March, Pelletier was fired. By 5 March, after failing to defend himself adequately against the allegations in the Auditor General's report, LeFrançois was fired as well.[citation needed]

Increasing problems and reinstated funding edit

 
Via RDCs at Qualicum Beach station, a stop on Victoria–Courtenay train. The Victoria–Courtenay service was suspended in March 2010.

The reversal of funding in 2003 led to a backlog of deferred maintenance and left Via unable to replace or refurbish life-expired locomotives and rolling stock. Conversely, Via ridership increased from 3.8 million in 2005 to 4.1 million in 2006.[9] On 11 October 2007, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty announced federal government funding of $691.9 million over five years (of which $519 million was for capital projects and the remainder additional operating funding). The capital funding was earmarked to refurbish Via's fleet of 54 F40PH-2 locomotives to meet new emissions standards and extend their service lives by 15–20 years, refurbish the interiors of LRC coaches, reduce track capacity bottlenecks and speed restrictions in the Windsor-Quebec City Corridor, and make repairs to a number of stations across the network.[10]

This announcement was similar in content to the previous "Renaissance II" package, and once again was criticized for not including new equipment or funding for services outside the Windsor-Quebec City Corridor. Shortly afterwards, documents obtained by the Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act revealed that delays due to equipment failures had risen by 60 percent since the previous year. The company attributed this to problems with the aging F40 locomotive fleet.[11]

On 27 January 2009, the Government of Canada's 2009 Economic Action Plan increased funding to Via by $407 million to support improvements, including increased train frequencies and enhanced on-time performance and speed, particularly in the Montreal-Ottawa-Toronto corridor.[12]

On 21 July 2009, Via began cancelling all trains in anticipation of an engineers' strike, which officially began at midnight on 24 July. Engineers had been without a contract since 31 December 2006.[needs update] Full service resumed on 27 July.[13] An additional strike by the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW) union, representing around 2,200 employees, was planned to begin on 4 July 2010, but was called off after the union and Via reached a three-year contract.[14]

2010s edit

 
A Via F40PH-2D in Jasper, February 2011. Via's fleet of F40PH-2Ds were refurbished in the late-2000s to meet emission standards.

Via experienced more service cuts at the dawn of the 2010. In March 2011, the daily Victoria–Courtenay The Malahat RDC service on Vancouver Island was suspended indefinitely due to deteriorating track (it has yet to resume). By 27 June 2012, Via announced additional service cuts due to funding issues:

  • The Canadian was reduced from three days a week to two days a week beginning November 2012; service operated twice weekly November–April and thrice weekly May–October until 2019. In 2019, only two trains per week operated on the full route, while the third train ran only between Vancouver and Edmonton once a week in each direction.
  • The Ocean was reduced from six days a week to thrice weekly beginning October 2012.
  • Corridor services west of Toronto were reduced, with weekend service reductions to Montreal and Ottawa, Ontario.[15]
  • Corridor services to Sarnia and the Niagara region were reduced to once daily in October 2012, with additional taking effect in July 2012. Sarnia was left with a single daily round-trip.[16] Niagara Falls lost all service except the joint Amtrak-Via daily New York City-Toronto Maple Leaf service,[17] although Toronto regional commuter service was later provided by GO Transit.
  • Corridor services to Kitchener,[18] London,[19] and Windsor[20] were reduced starting in October 2012, with at least two daily round trips surviving.
  • In September 2013, the Gaspé service, which had been "bustituted" in 2011, was suspended indefinitely.[21]

To address declining on-time performance due to freight train traffic on Via routes, MP Olivia Chow drafted a private member's bill in 2014 that would reorganize the company and allow the government to force freight rail carriers to give scheduling priority to public passenger rail. However, as with most private member's bills, it was not passed.[22][23]

Service improvements edit

The Quebec-Windsor corridor was the focus of service restorations and implements. A direct Ottawa-Quebec City train was restored, with additional trips between Ottawa, Montreal and Toronto being added. In 2016, LRC passenger cars used for the corridor were refurbished; in the Via 1 class, this included single seating.

 
A passenger car adorned in Canada 150 livery, August 2017. For the country's sesquicentennial, Via released a special youth rail pass.

In March 2017, Via announced the release of a new category of rail pass valid for the month of July 2017 (corresponding to Canada's sesquicentennial celebrations) for youth aged 18–25, costing $150 (several hundred dollars cheaper than a comparable rail pass would typically cost). A larger than expected response resulted in the temporary loss of functionality for Via's website. Despite plans to cap the number of passes sold at 1867 (the year of Canadian Confederation), over 4,000 passes were ultimately sold. The company received significant backlash, as it initially appeared there was no limit on the number of passes available.[24]

Extreme winter conditions had always been an operational hazard for Via, with the Ottawa routes and Canadian being most vulnerable.[25] Equally, summer repairs and construction often delayed trains systemwide, even though schedules were regularly adjusted in an attempt to minimize delays.[25]

However, by 2018, freight traffic on the heavily used CN lines had become a significant concern for maintaining on-time service.[26][27] This issue arose due to typical siding sizes, which were not long enough to accommodate modern freight trains. Passenger trains were consequently placed on sidings whenever two trains passed (rather than freights), which meant that passenger trains did not have priority on CN lines.[28][29] The issue existed in all parts of the Via network, although it became most extreme on the Canadian, where delays increased from an average of five hours to as much as 50 over the four-day journey.[30][29][28] Via ultimately addressed the issue by eliminating its late policy on its cross-Canada trains but retaining it for the Corridor routes.[31][27] However, Via continues to compensate inconvenienced guests with necessary hotel accommodations prior to the journey, as well as ensuring continued transportation where a connection to a second Via train had been missed.[27] As such, compensation costs were factored into Via's 2018 budget.

By the end of 2018, the full route time on the Canadian had been increased twice to absorb freight delays.[26][32][27] The second extension – to five days – has been mostly successful in decreasing delays, and also allowed for a daytime transit of Hells Gate in BC, previously transversed overnight in the dark. The scheduled increased running time actually resulted in the Canadian arriving early on several occasions.[33][34] However, Toronto–Vancouver service frequencies were reduced to only twice weekly during peak summer period, with a third Toronto–Edmonton run suspended entirely. [clear]

On 12 December 2018, Via announced that it had awarded a contract to Siemens Canada for 32 train sets to replace the entire Quebec City-Windsor Corridor fleet.[35] This marked the completion of a procurement process launched following the 2018 federal budget, which allocated funding for the fleet replacement. During the request-for-proposals stage, Via had narrowed the potential suppliers down to Siemens, Bombardier, Talgo and Stadler Rail. Siemens was ultimately selected after finishing first on the key criteria, which included the ability to deliver in a timely fashion, the quality of the product offering, and the price. The new fleet will consist of Siemens SC-42 locomotives hauling a combination of coaches, business-class cars, and cab cars from the Siemens Venture series to allow bi-directional operation. The trains will be built at Siemens plant in Sacramento, California, and Siemens committed to including at least 20 percent Canadian content in the final product. The order includes an option for an additional 16 train sets to be exercised if the federal government approves Via's high-frequency dedicated-corridor project.[36] The first train set is to be delivered for testing by winter 2021, with the first sets in service by 2022 and all trains in service by 2024. The delivery of the new trains will allow Via to retire LRC and Renaissance equipment from the corridor, and re-allocate the HEP2 and corridor-based HEP1 cars to other parts of the network.

2020s edit

 
A Via Rail SCV-42 Charger pushing Siemens Venture train

On October 30, 2021, Via Rail implemented a mandatory COVID-19 vaccine policy in line with new Transport Canada regulations in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, which required all Via Rail staff and passengers aged 12 and older to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 to travel aboard Via Rail trains. Until November 30 a negative COVID test was also considered an alternate to show proof of vaccine prior to boarding.[37]

On March 9, 2022, Minister of Transport Omar Alghabra announced that the federal government would seek private proposals for operation of the proposed High Frequency Rail corridor.[38] Labour union Unifor criticized this move, calling it a first step toward eventual privatization of Via Rail, and launched the Get Canada Back on Track campaign to raise awareness and call for "a legislative framework that protects public, accessible, safe passenger rail and directs immediate public investments" to service improvements.[39][40]

Insignia edit

In addition to using commercial logos, Via Rail is one of several Crown corporations that has been granted heraldic symbols by the Canadian Heraldic Authority.

The coat of arms was granted on May 15, 2020, and presented by Canada's Chief Herald.[41]

An heraldic badge was approved for use at the same time as the coat of arms. The badge design follows the design of a law enforcement agency badge in Canada, denoting the responsibilities of Via Rail Police Service. The Royal Crown indicates that Via Rail has police constables appointed for the enforcement of the laws relating to the protection of persons and property.[41]

A flag was also granted by the Canadian Heraldic Authority. It is black and charged with Via Rail's badge.[41]

Budget and management edit

Via is operated as an independent crown corporation and receives a subsidy from the Minister of Transport to provide service to remote communities. Via operates more than 500 trains per week from coast to coast. The sum of CA$369 million was earned from passenger revenues in 2018. Over 4.74 million passenger voyages were taken in 2018. An on-time ratio of 71 percent was achieved in that year. Over 3,115 persons were employed by Via by the end of 2018.

Via president Yves Desjardins-Siciliano stated that the subsidy for passenger rail travel in Canada in 2015 was about 200 percent: for every $1 travellers spend on fares, Canada pays $2 in subsidy.[42]

As of May 2019, the chair of the board of directors is Françoise Bertrand. The Annual accounts of Via are audited to GAAP principles by the Auditor-General of Canada, under the Financial Administration Act. As a federal Crown corporation, Via Rail Canada Inc. operates under the Canada Business Corporations Act and is subject to income taxes, should a profit ever be declared by it. The corporation had $9,300,000 in share capital as of 2018. Via also received $394.4 million of government funding in 2018.[citation needed]

Expansion plans edit

Maritimes edit

Via has explored the introduction of daily regional service in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick (connecting Halifax, Moncton, and Campbellton) to complement the thrice-weekly Ocean service to Montreal. As of 2017, Via's statement was that it was "exploring an eastern intercity corridor service" and that further developments were dependent on infrastructure upgrades and equipment testing.[43]

Via has also expressed interest in operating commuter rail service on CN tracks in Halifax that would run from the city's downtown station as far as Windsor Junction.[43][44] However, in June 2019, Halifax regional council voted unanimously to direct staff "not to pursue commuter rail service further ... due to infrastructure requirements and associated financial implications, as well as operational considerations and restraints".[45][46]

High-frequency rail project edit

Via developed a $4.4 billion high-frequency rail (HFR) service plan as a response to delays faced by sharing tracks with freight trains. The plan opts for a dedicated track between Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, and Quebec City, offering more frequent trains (although running at conventional speeds). In Ontario, Via would run a new rail line on currently underused tracks from Toronto to Ottawa through Peterborough instead of Kingston. In Quebec, corridor trains would travel from Montreal to Quebec City through Trois-Rivières on the north shore of the St. Lawrence River rather than on the south shore through Drummondville.[23] Via claimed this would allow them to run more trains in the corridor, reduce trip times by 25 percent and improve on-time performance to over 95 percent.[47]

Feasibility studies were funded by the federal government in the 2016–2018 budgets, and the 2018 budget allowed for the funding of the fleet replacement portion of the plan, though not the dedicated rail lines.[48] Contrary to expectations, the 2019 federal budget did not include a final decision for new funds for HFR.[49] However, in January 2020 Via announced the hiring of a joint venture of engineering firms AECOM and Arup to undertake a detailed engineering study of the proposal.[50] The Toronto city council passed a motion supporting the project on March 30, 2023.[51]

Service suspensions edit

Two former Via routes—The Malahat (service ended in 2011) and Chaleur (service ended in 2013)—are currently suspended due to poor track conditions. Via plans to reintroduce service once track upgrades have been completed.[43] The Quebec government announced funds for repairs to Chaleur trackage in 2017, with a completion date stated only as being "several years away."[52] No concrete plan to restore trackage along The Malahat has been announced as of 2020.

 
A Via F40PH-2D leading the Winnipeg–Churchill train, November 2012. The service was suspended from May 2017 to December 2018 for track maintenance.

The Winnipeg–Churchill train was disrupted by severe spring flooding on 23 May 2017, when the Hudson Bay Railway tracks were damaged beyond standard maintenance. Winnipeg–Gillam service continued.[53] OmniTRAX, the original owner of the track, refused to make the repairs, saying that the track was no longer viable, despite the matching federal subsidy.[54] The railroad was Churchill's only land link to southern Canada, and its loss resulted in significant cost-of-living increases for residents along the corridor (a stranded train was removed by ship in October 2017).[54]

Service to Churchill was restored in late 2018, after the tracks, Churchill port, and Churchill marine tank farm were purchased by Arctic Gateway Group.[55][56] The federal government assisted in the purchase with $74 million of dedicated northern infrastructure money up front and an additional commitment of $43 million over 10 years.[57][55] To restore passenger rail service before winter, Arctic Gateway repaired 29 washouts in 35 days. Although a special Via train arrived in Churchill on 1 November, the first regular Via train arrived in Churchill on 4 December, 560 days after service initially ceased.[58][59]

On February 13, 2020, following several days of blockades during the nationwide Coastal GasLink Pipeline protests, Via Rail announced that it would be shutting down most of its passenger train service across Canada until further notice, with the exception of the Sudbury–White River train line and the Winnipeg–Churchill train between Churchill and The Pas.[60][61][62] Later in 2020, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, nearly all Via Rail trains were suspended with the exception of the Winnipeg-Churchill train as well as one train daily on each route within the corridor.[63][64] Along with the previous protest-related service suspensions, it is the most extensive temporary reduction of service in Via Rail's history.

Travelling on Via edit

Travel on Via varies by region as much as class. Many of Via's policies and protocols are the product of running a national train system with varying pressures and needs of different passengers, communities, and contexts. The results are wide-ranging travel experiences depending on the distance and location of the journey.

Unscheduled stops edit

Some Via routes outside the corridor offer the option of unscheduled stops at places where there is no station. With 48 hours notice, a passenger can request to entrain or detrain at a specified milepost. This option is available on all of the Adventure Routes, as well as the Canadian between Capreol and Winnipeg.[65]

Classes of service edit

 
Economy-class seating in a Via Rail long-distance coach car, with one fully reclined
  • Escape Fare: Discounted seats from economy class, with restrictions on refunds and exchanges.
  • Economy: Economy class seating in coach cars.[66] Snacks and beverages are sold by employees with service carts, in a lounge car, or in a restaurant car. Free Wi-Fi access is provided in the Corridor and on the Ocean.[67]
 
Business-class coach on the Corridor
  • Business: (formerly called Via 1): First-class seating available on most Corridor trains in southern Quebec and Ontario.[68]
  • Touring: Available on the Skeena only in peak travel months.[69]
  • Sleeper Plus: Sleeping accommodations aboard overnight trains. This service class was formerly known as Sleeper in some cases, including on the now-suspended Chaleur.[70][71] Each car has access to a washroom and, optionally, a shower. Access to business lounges where available or the Sleeper Plus Lounge in Halifax is available on departure day.
  • Prestige: Available on the Canadian only. In addition to the Sleeper Plus amenities, includes modernized luxurious sleeping accommodations at the rear of the train.

On board edit

Amenities edit

 
A Via dining car preparing for the first serving of breakfast

Smoking is prohibited on all Via trains. Smoking tobacco has been banned on the Corridor routes since 1993[72] and this policy was gradually extended to all trains, while smoking cannabis was banned on all Via routes on the same day it was made legal in Canada. The last remaining on-board smoking was permitted in a smoker's lounge on some long-distance routes, only at certain times of day until 2002.[73]

Washrooms are provided for each car. On sleeper cars, every private room has its own separate washroom.

Food service varies by train. All trains besides the Sudbury–White River train offer snacks, light meals, and both alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages for purchase. Long-distance trains offer traditional sit-down dining and full meals to sleeper class passengers. Economy-class passengers can purchase hot take-out meals prepared in the dining car on long-distance trains during the peak season, and eat in the sit-down dining car in the off-peak.[74]

Complimentary Wi-Fi service is available in the Corridor.[75][76][77] Via was the first North American transportation service to offer Wi-Fi to its passengers in early 2006, and was one of the first in the world to do so.

Wi-Fi service has been added to the Ocean train in the service cars, and to the Canadian,[78] although connections are unreliable in most places outside urban centres.

Accessibility and safety concerns edit

All Via trains are capable of accommodating wheelchairs, although capacity is limited.[79]

Routes and connections edit

 
A map of Via Rail routes, showing the frequency of Via trains on it

Via operates in the provinces of Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec, and Saskatchewan. The only province or territory connected to the continental railway network and not served by Via is the Northwest Territories. Newfoundland and Labrador, Nunavut, Prince Edward Island, and Yukon have no rail connections to the continental network and thus no Via service.

Via operates over 475 trains per week over 19 routes, marketed in four broad categories:[80]

Unlike Amtrak, which gives every route a specific name, most Via trains are identified only by their route number and destination. The only named Via trains are the Canadian and the Ocean. The five "Adventure Routes" were previously branded as the Skeena, the Saguenay, the Abitibi, the Lake Superior, and the Hudson Bay, respectively, and may still be referred to by these names in local usage.

Track ownership edit

 
A Via Rail train passes by a Canadian National Railway train. The majority of the track Via operates on is owned by CNR.

As of 2017, the mileage makeup of Via's route network by track owner/host railway was as follows:[43][note 1]

In total, about 88 percent of Via trackage is owned by Class I railroads, 8 percent by shortline railroads, and 5 percent by government agencies.

Connections edit

 
The Maple Leaf train outside Niagara Falls station. The route is jointly operated between Via and Amtrak, providing Via riders with a connection to Amtrak stations based in New York.

The Maple Leaf, operating between New York City and Toronto via Albany, Buffalo, and Niagara Falls, is jointly managed by Via and Amtrak. The train operates using Amtrak equipment, but on the Canadian side of the border is staffed by Via employees and operated as a typical Via train.

Two other train routes link Canada and the US: the Adirondack (Montreal-New York) and the Amtrak Cascades (Vancouver-Seattle-Portland). While both of these routes share stations with Via at their Canadian termini, they are fully operated by Amtrak and single-ticket connections to Via trains are not offered.

Via also has connection agreements with several local and intercity bus operators, car-sharing services, and airlines. Passengers who are flying with some airlines can combine their air and rail trips under the same record locator.[83]

Rolling stock edit

Via owns 74 locomotives and 501 passenger cars.[84] Examples include the GMD F40PH-2 diesel locomotive and the famed "Park"-class sleeper-dome-lounge cars found on the rear of the Canadian and the Jasper–Prince Rupert train.

Carbon emissions edit

In 2010, Via's carbon dioxide (CO2) equivalent emissions per passenger kilometre were 0.117 kg.[85] For comparison, this is similar to Amtrak or a car with two people,[86] about twice as high as the UK rail average,[87] about four times the average US motorcoach,[88] and about eight times a Finnish electric intercity train or fully loaded fifty-seat coach.[89]

Accidents and incidents edit

  • On 8 February 1986, a Via train collided with a CN freight train near Hinton, Alberta, killing 23 people and injuring 71.
  • On 20 November 1994, at approximately 18:20, Via train No. 66 travelling eastward at approximately 96 mph, struck a piece of rail intentionally placed on the track at Mile 242.07 of the CN North America Kingston Subdivision, in Brighton, Ontario. A fire erupted and the trailing portion of the locomotive and the first two-passenger cars behind the locomotive became engulfed in flames. Forty-six of the 385 passengers were injured, most while exiting the train in life-threatening conditions. 2 local residents were charged and convicted after an investigation by the local police.[90]
  • On 3 September 1997, the Canadian (train No. 2) from Vancouver to Toronto, travelling eastward at 67 mph, derailed at Mile 7.5 of the CN Wainwright Subdivision, near Biggar, Saskatchewan. Thirteen of nineteen cars and the two locomotives derailed. Seventy-nine of the 198 passengers and crew on board were injured, 1 fatally and 13 seriously. Approximately 600 feet of main track was destroyed.[91] The cause was determined to be an axle bearing failure which was detected but erroneously ignored. Via was heavily criticized for a lack of attention to safety.
  • On 23 April 1999, Via train No. 74 travelling eastward at Mile 46.7 on the CN Chatham Subdivision in Thamesville, Ontario derailed after a switch was left open by a CN worker causing the train to jump the tracks and collide with stationary hoppers on the adjacent track, derailing the locomotive and its four-passenger cars. The two engineers were killed and 77 of the 186 passengers injured, four seriously. Approximately 50 m of the main track and 100 m of the yard track were destroyed.[92]
  • On 12 April 2001, the Ocean bound for Montreal derailed in Stewiacke, Nova Scotia, at a manually operated main track switch. A standard CN switch lock used to secure the switch in correct position had been tampered with. The two locomotives and the first two cars continued on the main track, but the following cars took a diverging route onto an industrial track adjacent to the main track. Nine of the cars derailed and a farm supply building, as well as the industrial track were destroyed. Four occupants of the building escaped without injury prior to impact. There were 132 persons on board the train. 22 persons were transported to hospital in either Truro or Halifax. Nine were seriously injured.[93] A 15-year-old boy pleaded guilty to the charge of mischief endangering life relating to the lock tampering.[94]
  • On 26 February 2012, Via Train No. 92 en route to Toronto, derailed in Burlington, Ontario, killing all three railroad engineers and injuring 46 (three seriously). The cause of the derailment is attributed to the excessive speed of the train travelling through a switch from track 2 to track 3.
  • 2013 Via Rail Canada terrorism plot: In April 2013, two men inspired by al-Qaeda were charged with plotting to derail a Via train in the Greater Toronto Area.[95] In 2015, both men were convicted of terrorism-related offenses and sentenced to life imprisonment.[96] One of the two men was mentally unstable and misdiagnosed with schizophrenia.[97][98]
  • On 18 September 2013, a collision occurred between train No. 51 and a double-decker OC Transpo bus that failed to stop at a level crossing in Ottawa, Ontario. Six people were killed and 31 injured (11 critically), all of whom were on the bus. The impact resulted in the train derailing approximately 100–200 feet (30–61 m) down the track.[99]
  • On 5 July 2018, a train with 16 passengers and five crew members derailed north of Hudson Bay, Saskatchewan, while travelling from Winnipeg to Churchill. Passengers and crew sustained only minor injuries, but it took several hours for emergency crews to arrive due to the remote location of the incident. Paramedics and firefighters had to wait near the tracks for CN rail trucks to arrive that could transport them to the crash site.[100][101]
  • On 31 December 2019, a train with five crew and seven passengers derailed and tipped on its side near Katrime, Manitoba. No one was seriously injured.[102][103]
  • On 23 December 2022, Via shut down its Toronto–Ottawa and Toronto–Montreal corridors amid a winter storm, with nine trains becoming trapped overnight including one on the Toronto–Windsor corridor. Two other Via trains that had departed were ordered to return to station. A tree fell on train 55 from Ottawa to Toronto resulting in passengers being trapped on board for 15 hours; a rescue train was required which coupled onto train 55. Subsequently, a car on a CN train derailed in Kingston shutting down the entire Toronto–Montreal corridor on 25 and 26 December. On 25 December alone Via cancelled 25 trains. Via compensated the hundreds of affected customers with refunds and vouchers.[104][105][106]

Coat of Arms edit

Coat of arms of Via Rail
 
Notes
Granted 15 May 2020.[107]
Crest
A locomotive wheel Or issuant from a coronet erablé Gules.
Escutcheon
Per fess Sable and Or, in chief a bar fracted of five pieces Or and in base two bendlets sinister Sable all within a bordure Or.
Supporters
Two lynx Or each standing on a sandy base set with a bed of crushed stone Proper.
Motto
Via Per Fines Nostros (The Way Across The Country)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Since the most recent corporate plan was published, the Guelph Subdivision, used by Via between Kitchener and London, has reverted to CN from the Goderich-Exeter Railway.[82]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Annual Report 2018" (PDF). Via Rail Canada. Retrieved May 13, 2019.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ Sustainable Mobility Report 2018 (PDF) (Report). Via Rail Canada. p. 5. (PDF) from the original on February 26, 2020. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  3. ^ "Canada's Pacific railway: an iron spine for a paper nation". Engelsberg ideas (in Swedish). Retrieved January 5, 2024.
  4. ^ a b Nelligan, Tom (1982). Via Rail Canada: The first five years. PJT Publishing. ISBN 0-937658-08-1.
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  6. ^ a b Drost, Philip; Desson, Craig (January 1, 2023). "What we can learn about the future of rail from its past". CBC. Archived from the original on January 1, 2023. Retrieved January 7, 2024.
  7. ^ . Transport2000.ca. January 30, 2004. Archived from the original on April 20, 2011. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
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  9. ^ . CBC. October 11, 2007. Archived from the original on October 12, 2007. Retrieved October 11, 2007.
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  39. ^ Unifor. "Via Rail P3 privatization must be stopped in its tracks". www.newswire.ca. Retrieved November 3, 2022.
  40. ^ "Back on Track". Back on Track. Retrieved November 3, 2022.
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  44. ^ Campbell, Francis (December 8, 2018). "Commuter rail 'far from dead' in Halifax". The Chronicle Herald. from the original on February 26, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  45. ^ Woodford, Zane (June 18, 2019). "Halifax council kills commuter rail proposal". Toronto Star. from the original on February 3, 2020. Retrieved February 3, 2020.
  46. ^ Peddle, Stuart (June 19, 2019). "Halifax commuter rail not coming, but councillor still holding out hope". The Chronicle Herald. from the original on February 3, 2020. Retrieved February 3, 2020.
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  53. ^ "Via Rail service between Churchill and Gillam suspended indefinitely due to closure of the railway infrastructure in northern Manitoba". www.newswire.ca. from the original on June 4, 2019. Retrieved June 9, 2019.
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  55. ^ a b "'We are free:' Churchill celebrates return of train service with prime minister". Edmonton Journal. November 1, 2018. from the original on June 4, 2019. Retrieved June 9, 2019.
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  86. ^ respectively http://docs.wri.org/wri_co2comm_2002_commuting_protected.xls January 12, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, sheet 8, cell C33, figures from 2002; (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on May 15, 2013. Retrieved November 23, 2012. table 1.1, figures from 2007
  87. ^ (PDF). March 24, 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 24, 2009.
  88. ^ (PDF). January 6, 2009. Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved August 14, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  89. ^ Respectively http://lipasto.vtt.fi/yksikkopaastot/henkiloliikennee/raideliikennee/junat_henkiloe.htm February 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, figures for 2007; http://www.lipasto.vtt.fi/yksikkopaastot/henkiloliikennee/tieliikennee/linja-autote/latiee.htm July 19, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, figures for 2010.
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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Official website  

rail, canada, reporting, mark, operating, canadian, crown, corporation, that, mandated, operate, intercity, passenger, rail, service, canada, canada, company, typecrown, corporationindustryrail, transportfoundedjanuary, 1977, years, 1977, headquartersplace, vi. Via Rail Canada Inc reporting mark VIA ˈ v iː e operating as Via Rail or Via is a Canadian Crown corporation that is mandated to operate intercity passenger rail service in Canada Via Rail Canada Inc Company typeCrown corporationIndustryRail transportFoundedJanuary 12 1977 47 years ago 1977 01 12 HeadquartersPlace Ville Marie Montreal Quebec CanadaArea servedCanadaKey peopleFrancoise Bertrand Chairman Mario Peloquin CEO RevenueCA 392 6 million 2018 1 Operating incomeCA 272 6 million 2018 Total assetsCA 1 467 billion 2018 OwnerGovernment of CanadaNumber of employees3 234 2020 Websitewww wbr viarail wbr ca wbr enThis article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Geographic map of the Via Rail systemOverviewStations called at378 2 Reporting markVIADates of operation1977 presentPredecessorPassenger services operated by the Canadian National Railway and the Canadian Pacific Railway as well as other smaller companiesTechnicalTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeLength12 500 kilometres 7 800 mi Via Rail operates over 500 trains per week across eight Canadian provinces and 12 500 kilometres 7 800 mi of track 97 percent of which is owned and maintained by other railway companies mostly by Canadian National Railway CN Via Rail carried approximately 4 39 million passengers in 2017 the majority along the Corridor routes connecting the major cities of the Quebec City Windsor Corridor and had an on time performance of 73 percent 1 Although Via Rail was established to accommodate passenger operations from the Canadian Pacific Railway it now mainly uses its network for tourists 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Formation and early years 1 3 1980s 1 4 1990s 1 4 1 Renaissance funding 1 5 2000s 1 5 1 Sponsorship scandal 1 5 2 Increasing problems and reinstated funding 1 6 2010s 1 6 1 Service improvements 1 7 2020s 2 Insignia 3 Budget and management 3 1 Expansion plans 3 1 1 Maritimes 3 1 2 High frequency rail project 3 2 Service suspensions 4 Travelling on Via 4 1 Unscheduled stops 4 2 Classes of service 4 3 On board 4 3 1 Amenities 4 3 2 Accessibility and safety concerns 5 Routes and connections 5 1 Track ownership 5 2 Connections 6 Rolling stock 7 Carbon emissions 8 Accidents and incidents 9 Coat of Arms 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory editThis section may have too many subsection headers Please help consolidate the section January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Background edit See also History of rail transport in Canada nbsp CNR Rapido train cars in Pickering July 1968 In an effort to attract riders new train cars were acquired by CN in the 1960s Yearly passenger levels on Canada s passenger trains peaked at 60 million during World War II Following the war the growth of air travel and the personal automobile caused significant loss of mode share for Canada s passenger train operators By the 1960s Canadian National Railway CN and the Canadian Pacific Railway CP found that passenger trains were no longer economically viable CP sought to divest itself of its passenger trains but federal government regulators and politicians balked forcing them to maintain a minimal service through the 1970s with the government subsidizing up to 80 percent of losses CN being a Crown corporation at that time was encouraged by the federal government and political interests to invest in passenger trains Innovative marketing schemes such as Red White and Blue fares new equipment such as scenic dome cars and rail diesel cars and services such as Rapido and the UAC TurboTrain trains temporarily increased numbers of passengers reversing previous declines 4 4 5 These increases proved temporary by 1977 total passenger numbers had dropped below five million The decline of passenger rail became a federal election issue in 1974 when the government of Pierre Trudeau promised to implement a nationwide carrier similar to Amtrak in the United States Starting in 1976 CN began branding its passenger services with the bilingual name Via or Via CN The Via logo began to appear on CN passenger locomotives and cars while still carrying CN logos as well That September Via published a single timetable with information on both CN and CP trains marking the first time that Canadians could find all major passenger trains in one publication In 1977 CN underwent a dramatic restructuring when it placed various non core freight railway activities into separate subsidiaries such as ferries under CN Marine and passenger trains under Via Rail which was subsequently renamed Via Rail Canada 4 6 9 Formation and early years edit nbsp A Via Rail train at Cochrane station in August 1978 Earlier that year CNR and CPR passenger rail service were spun off into Via Rail Canada On 12 January 1977 CN spun off its passenger services as a separate Crown corporation Via Rail Canada At its inception Via acquired all CN passenger cars and locomotives Following several months of negotiation on 29 October 1978 Via assumed all CP passenger train operations and took possession of cars and locomotives Passenger train services which were not included in the creation of Via Rail included those offered by BC Rail Algoma Central Railway Ontario Northland Railway Quebec North Shore amp Labrador Railway various urban commuter train services operated by CN and CP and remaining CN passenger services in Newfoundland At this time Via did not own any trackage and had to pay right of way fees to CN and CP sometimes being the only user of rural branch lines citation needed Via initially had a tremendous variety of equipment much of it in need of replacement and operated routes stretching from Sydney Nova Scotia to Prince Rupert British Columbia and north to Churchill Manitoba Over 150 scheduled trains per week were in operation including transcontinental services regional trains and corridor services citation needed While Via remains an independent federal Crown corporation mandated to operate as a business it is hindered by the fact that it was created by an Order in Council and not from legislation passed by Parliament Had Via been enabled by legislation the company would be permitted to seek funding on the open money markets as other Crown corporations such as CN have done in the past It is largely for this reason that critics say Via like Amtrak in the United States is vulnerable to federal budget cuts and continues to answer first to its political masters as opposed to the business decisions needed to ensure the viability of intercity passenger rail service 5 1980s edit nbsp The LRC in Port Hope October 1981 Via Rail ordered the LRCs in the 1980s to replace its older train cars In 1981 Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau s government endorsed Minister of Transport Jean Luc Pepin s plan which slashed Via s budget leading to a 40 percent reduction in the company s operations Frequently sold out trains such as the Super Continental and the popular Atlantic were discontinued The retrenchment of the former reduced Via to operating only one transcontinental train The Canadian citation needed Via also sought to reduce its reliance on over 30 year old second hand equipment and placed a significant order with Bombardier Transportation for new high speed locomotives and cars which would be used in its corridor trains The LRC Light Rapid Comfortable locomotives and cars used advanced technology such as active tilt to increase speed but proved troublesome and took several years to work out problems by 1990 only a handful of LRC locomotives remained in service which were subsequently retired by the arrival of the GE Genesis locomotives in 2001 citation needed The election of Brian Mulroney s Progressive Conservative government in 1984 brought an initial friend to Via when several of Mulroney s commitments included rescinding the Via cuts of 1981 by restoring the Super Continental under pressure from his western caucus and the Atlantic under pressure from his eastern caucus and then Saint John mayor Elsie Wayne Prime Minister Mulroney s government gave Via funding to refurbish some of its cars and purchase new locomotives this time a more reliable model from General Motors diesel division citation needed It was during this time on 8 February 1986 that Via s eastbound Super Continental collided with a CN freight train near Hinton Alberta as a result of the freight train crew missing a signal light resulting in 23 deaths By the late 1980s inflation and other rising costs were taking their toll on federal budgets and in the Mulroney government s 1989 budget Via again saw its budget slashed by 1 billion 6 surpassing even the 1981 cuts under Trudeau 1990s edit nbsp A Via GMD FP7 leads the Canadian in Regina May 1982 The Canadian was rerouted in the 1990s ending service to several cities like Calgary Minister of Transport Benoit Bouchard oversaw the reduction in service on 15 January 1990 when Via s operations were reduced by 55 percent citation needed The privatization of CN rail in 1995 also negatively affected service as it resulted in an effective monopoly with Via trains having to yield to CN trains 6 Services such as the Super Continental were again discontinued along with numerous disparate rural services such as in Nova Scotia s Annapolis Valley and Cape Breton Island western Canada and in the corridor The Canadian was also moved from its home rails on CP to the northerly CN route previously plied by the Super Continental The shift to the less populated route between Toronto and Vancouver severed major western cities such as Regina and Calgary from the passenger rail network and flared western bitterness toward the Government of Canada citation needed The official justification for the rerouting was that the trains would serve more remote communities but the concentration of ridings held by the Progressive Conservatives along the CN route attracted the charge that the move was chiefly political Harvie Andre one of Alberta s federal cabinet ministers who represented Calgary stated publicly that he did not care if he never saw a passenger train again in his life citation needed The Mulroney cuts allowed Via to consolidate its fleet of cars and locomotives resulting in a fleet of refurbished stainless steel HEP 1 and HEP 2 rebuilds and LRC cars as well as rationalizing its locomotive fleet with GM and Bombardier LRC units citation needed Via was not spared from further cutbacks in Jean Chretien s Liberal government elected in 1993 Minister of Finance Paul Martin s first budget in 1994 saw further Via cuts which saw the popular Atlantic dropped from the schedule focusing the eastern transcontinental service on the Ocean CP had sold off a large portion of track the Atlantic had operated on and as Via at that time was only mandated to provide passenger services on tracks belonging to CN or CP the route was discontinued citation needed This move was seen as somewhat controversial and politically motivated as the principal cities benefiting from the Atlantic s service were Sherbrooke Quebec and Saint John New Brunswick where the only two Progressive Conservative Party Members of Parliament in Canada were elected in the 1993 federal election in which Chretien s Liberal Party took power The Ocean service which was preserved currently operates on track between Montreal and Halifax running through the lower St Lawrence River valley and northern New Brunswick The Minister of Transport in Chretien s government at the time Douglas Young was elected from a district that included Bathurst New Brunswick on the Ocean s route A remote Via service to Quebec s Gaspe Peninsula the Chaleur was also spared from being cut at this time despite carrying fewer passengers than the Atlantic citation needed Renaissance funding edit nbsp A Via locomotive leads the International with Amtrak coaches The International route was jointly operated by Via and Amtrak from 1982 to 2004 By the late 1990s with a rail friendly Minister of Transport David Collenette in office there were modest funding increases to Via Corridor services were improved with new and faster trains a weekly tourist train the Bras d Or returned Via service to Cape Breton Island for the first time since the 1990 cuts and a commitment was made to continue operating on Vancouver Island but western Canada continued to languish with the only service provided by the Canadian and a few remote service trains in northern BC and Manitoba citation needed In a significant new funding program dubbed Renaissance a fleet of unused passenger cars which had been built for planned Nightstar sleeper services between locations in the United Kingdom and Continental Europe via the Channel Tunnel were purchased and adapted following the cancellation of the Nightstar project The new Renaissance cars were swiftly nicknamed deplaisance displeasure by French speaking employees and customers due to early problems adapting the equipment for Canadian use Doors and toilets froze in cold Atlantic Canada temperatures resulting in delays and service interruptions 7 New diesel electric P42DC locomotives purchased from General Electric GE allowed the withdrawal of older locomotives including remaining LRCs LRC passenger cars were retained and continued to provide much of the Corridor service This expansion to Via s fleet has permitted scheduling flexibility Additionally many passenger stations have been remodelled into passenger friendly destinations with several hosting co located transit and regional bus hubs for various municipalities citation needed 2000s edit nbsp Via Rail P42DC pulling LRC coaches towards MontrealOn 24 October 2003 federal Minister of Transport David Collenette announced 700 million in new funding over the next five years This funding was below the 3 billion needed to implement a high speed rail proposal in the Quebec City Windsor Corridor nicknamed ViaFast however the funding was intended to provide for faster more frequent and more reliable passenger service across Canada preserving the option for higher speed rail such as the Via Fast proposal said Collenette This new project was to be called Renaissance II 8 On 18 December 2003 Liberal Prime Minister PM Paul Martin froze federal spending on all major capital projects including Via s five year 700 million Renaissance II program announced just six weeks earlier by outgoing PM Chretien s administration Critics of Martin s cuts claimed that he was in a conflict of interest as his family through Canada Steamship Lines and various subsidiary and affiliated companies had once had a significant investment in the Voyageur Colonial Bus Lines an intercity bus line in Quebec and eastern Ontario that was a key competitor of Via citation needed Routes cut under the Martin government included the seasonal Bras d Or tourist train which ran for the last time in September 2004 and the Montreal Toronto overnight Enterprise which was discontinued in September 2005 The Sarnia Chicago International was also discontinued in April 2004 by Amtrak Via s portion of the route from Toronto Sarnia remained in operation as Via was able to use their own equipment to operate the train citation needed Sponsorship scandal edit See also Sponsorship scandal The federal Auditor General s report released on 10 February 2004 showed what appeared to be a criminal misdirection of government funds intended for advertising to key Quebec based supporters of the Liberal Party of Canada Included in the Auditor General s report was the fact that Via was used as one of several federal government departments agencies and Crown corporations to funnel these illicit funds Forced to act on the Auditor General s report due to its political implications Martin s government suspended Via President Marc LeFrancois on 24 February 2004 giving him an ultimatum of several days to defend himself against allegations in the report or face further disciplinary action citation needed Several days later during LeFrancois s suspension former Via marketing department employee Myriam Bedard claimed she had been fired several years earlier when she questioned company billing practices in dealing with advertising companies According to CBC News an arbitrator s report later concluded that Bedard had voluntarily left Via She was publicly belittled by Via CEO Jean Pelletier in national media on 27 February 2004 Pelletier retracted his statements but on 1 March Pelletier was fired By 5 March after failing to defend himself adequately against the allegations in the Auditor General s report LeFrancois was fired as well citation needed Increasing problems and reinstated funding edit nbsp Via RDCs at Qualicum Beach station a stop on Victoria Courtenay train The Victoria Courtenay service was suspended in March 2010 The reversal of funding in 2003 led to a backlog of deferred maintenance and left Via unable to replace or refurbish life expired locomotives and rolling stock Conversely Via ridership increased from 3 8 million in 2005 to 4 1 million in 2006 9 On 11 October 2007 Finance Minister Jim Flaherty announced federal government funding of 691 9 million over five years of which 519 million was for capital projects and the remainder additional operating funding The capital funding was earmarked to refurbish Via s fleet of 54 F40PH 2 locomotives to meet new emissions standards and extend their service lives by 15 20 years refurbish the interiors of LRC coaches reduce track capacity bottlenecks and speed restrictions in the Windsor Quebec City Corridor and make repairs to a number of stations across the network 10 This announcement was similar in content to the previous Renaissance II package and once again was criticized for not including new equipment or funding for services outside the Windsor Quebec City Corridor Shortly afterwards documents obtained by the Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act revealed that delays due to equipment failures had risen by 60 percent since the previous year The company attributed this to problems with the aging F40 locomotive fleet 11 On 27 January 2009 the Government of Canada s 2009 Economic Action Plan increased funding to Via by 407 million to support improvements including increased train frequencies and enhanced on time performance and speed particularly in the Montreal Ottawa Toronto corridor 12 On 21 July 2009 Via began cancelling all trains in anticipation of an engineers strike which officially began at midnight on 24 July Engineers had been without a contract since 31 December 2006 needs update Full service resumed on 27 July 13 An additional strike by the Canadian Auto Workers CAW union representing around 2 200 employees was planned to begin on 4 July 2010 but was called off after the union and Via reached a three year contract 14 2010s edit nbsp A Via F40PH 2D in Jasper February 2011 Via s fleet of F40PH 2Ds were refurbished in the late 2000s to meet emission standards Via experienced more service cuts at the dawn of the 2010 In March 2011 the daily Victoria Courtenay The Malahat RDC service on Vancouver Island was suspended indefinitely due to deteriorating track it has yet to resume By 27 June 2012 Via announced additional service cuts due to funding issues The Canadian was reduced from three days a week to two days a week beginning November 2012 service operated twice weekly November April and thrice weekly May October until 2019 In 2019 only two trains per week operated on the full route while the third train ran only between Vancouver and Edmonton once a week in each direction The Ocean was reduced from six days a week to thrice weekly beginning October 2012 Corridor services west of Toronto were reduced with weekend service reductions to Montreal and Ottawa Ontario 15 Corridor services to Sarnia and the Niagara region were reduced to once daily in October 2012 with additional taking effect in July 2012 Sarnia was left with a single daily round trip 16 Niagara Falls lost all service except the joint Amtrak Via daily New York City Toronto Maple Leaf service 17 although Toronto regional commuter service was later provided by GO Transit Corridor services to Kitchener 18 London 19 and Windsor 20 were reduced starting in October 2012 with at least two daily round trips surviving In September 2013 the Gaspe service which had been bustituted in 2011 was suspended indefinitely 21 To address declining on time performance due to freight train traffic on Via routes MP Olivia Chow drafted a private member s bill in 2014 that would reorganize the company and allow the government to force freight rail carriers to give scheduling priority to public passenger rail However as with most private member s bills it was not passed 22 23 Service improvements edit The Quebec Windsor corridor was the focus of service restorations and implements A direct Ottawa Quebec City train was restored with additional trips between Ottawa Montreal and Toronto being added In 2016 LRC passenger cars used for the corridor were refurbished in the Via 1 class this included single seating nbsp A passenger car adorned in Canada 150 livery August 2017 For the country s sesquicentennial Via released a special youth rail pass In March 2017 Via announced the release of a new category of rail pass valid for the month of July 2017 corresponding to Canada s sesquicentennial celebrations for youth aged 18 25 costing 150 several hundred dollars cheaper than a comparable rail pass would typically cost A larger than expected response resulted in the temporary loss of functionality for Via s website Despite plans to cap the number of passes sold at 1867 the year of Canadian Confederation over 4 000 passes were ultimately sold The company received significant backlash as it initially appeared there was no limit on the number of passes available 24 Extreme winter conditions had always been an operational hazard for Via with the Ottawa routes and Canadian being most vulnerable 25 Equally summer repairs and construction often delayed trains systemwide even though schedules were regularly adjusted in an attempt to minimize delays 25 However by 2018 freight traffic on the heavily used CN lines had become a significant concern for maintaining on time service 26 27 This issue arose due to typical siding sizes which were not long enough to accommodate modern freight trains Passenger trains were consequently placed on sidings whenever two trains passed rather than freights which meant that passenger trains did not have priority on CN lines 28 29 The issue existed in all parts of the Via network although it became most extreme on the Canadian where delays increased from an average of five hours to as much as 50 over the four day journey 30 29 28 Via ultimately addressed the issue by eliminating its late policy on its cross Canada trains but retaining it for the Corridor routes 31 27 However Via continues to compensate inconvenienced guests with necessary hotel accommodations prior to the journey as well as ensuring continued transportation where a connection to a second Via train had been missed 27 As such compensation costs were factored into Via s 2018 budget By the end of 2018 the full route time on the Canadian had been increased twice to absorb freight delays 26 32 27 The second extension to five days has been mostly successful in decreasing delays and also allowed for a daytime transit of Hells Gate in BC previously transversed overnight in the dark The scheduled increased running time actually resulted in the Canadian arriving early on several occasions 33 34 However Toronto Vancouver service frequencies were reduced to only twice weekly during peak summer period with a third Toronto Edmonton run suspended entirely clear On 12 December 2018 Via announced that it had awarded a contract to Siemens Canada for 32 train sets to replace the entire Quebec City Windsor Corridor fleet 35 This marked the completion of a procurement process launched following the 2018 federal budget which allocated funding for the fleet replacement During the request for proposals stage Via had narrowed the potential suppliers down to Siemens Bombardier Talgo and Stadler Rail Siemens was ultimately selected after finishing first on the key criteria which included the ability to deliver in a timely fashion the quality of the product offering and the price The new fleet will consist of Siemens SC 42 locomotives hauling a combination of coaches business class cars and cab cars from the Siemens Venture series to allow bi directional operation The trains will be built at Siemens plant in Sacramento California and Siemens committed to including at least 20 percent Canadian content in the final product The order includes an option for an additional 16 train sets to be exercised if the federal government approves Via s high frequency dedicated corridor project 36 The first train set is to be delivered for testing by winter 2021 with the first sets in service by 2022 and all trains in service by 2024 The delivery of the new trains will allow Via to retire LRC and Renaissance equipment from the corridor and re allocate the HEP2 and corridor based HEP1 cars to other parts of the network 2020s edit nbsp A Via Rail SCV 42 Charger pushing Siemens Venture trainOn October 30 2021 Via Rail implemented a mandatory COVID 19 vaccine policy in line with new Transport Canada regulations in response to the COVID 19 pandemic which required all Via Rail staff and passengers aged 12 and older to be fully vaccinated against COVID 19 to travel aboard Via Rail trains Until November 30 a negative COVID test was also considered an alternate to show proof of vaccine prior to boarding 37 On March 9 2022 Minister of Transport Omar Alghabra announced that the federal government would seek private proposals for operation of the proposed High Frequency Rail corridor 38 Labour union Unifor criticized this move calling it a first step toward eventual privatization of Via Rail and launched the Get Canada Back on Track campaign to raise awareness and call for a legislative framework that protects public accessible safe passenger rail and directs immediate public investments to service improvements 39 40 Insignia editIn addition to using commercial logos Via Rail is one of several Crown corporations that has been granted heraldic symbols by the Canadian Heraldic Authority The coat of arms was granted on May 15 2020 and presented by Canada s Chief Herald 41 An heraldic badge was approved for use at the same time as the coat of arms The badge design follows the design of a law enforcement agency badge in Canada denoting the responsibilities of Via Rail Police Service The Royal Crown indicates that Via Rail has police constables appointed for the enforcement of the laws relating to the protection of persons and property 41 A flag was also granted by the Canadian Heraldic Authority It is black and charged with Via Rail s badge 41 Budget and management editVia is operated as an independent crown corporation and receives a subsidy from the Minister of Transport to provide service to remote communities Via operates more than 500 trains per week from coast to coast The sum of CA 369 million was earned from passenger revenues in 2018 Over 4 74 million passenger voyages were taken in 2018 An on time ratio of 71 percent was achieved in that year Over 3 115 persons were employed by Via by the end of 2018 Via president Yves Desjardins Siciliano stated that the subsidy for passenger rail travel in Canada in 2015 was about 200 percent for every 1 travellers spend on fares Canada pays 2 in subsidy 42 As of May 2019 the chair of the board of directors is Francoise Bertrand The Annual accounts of Via are audited to GAAP principles by the Auditor General of Canada under the Financial Administration Act As a federal Crown corporation Via Rail Canada Inc operates under the Canada Business Corporations Act and is subject to income taxes should a profit ever be declared by it The corporation had 9 300 000 in share capital as of 2018 Via also received 394 4 million of government funding in 2018 citation needed Expansion plans edit Maritimes edit Via has explored the introduction of daily regional service in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick connecting Halifax Moncton and Campbellton to complement the thrice weekly Ocean service to Montreal As of 2017 Via s statement was that it was exploring an eastern intercity corridor service and that further developments were dependent on infrastructure upgrades and equipment testing 43 Via has also expressed interest in operating commuter rail service on CN tracks in Halifax that would run from the city s downtown station as far as Windsor Junction 43 44 However in June 2019 Halifax regional council voted unanimously to direct staff not to pursue commuter rail service further due to infrastructure requirements and associated financial implications as well as operational considerations and restraints 45 46 High frequency rail project edit Via developed a 4 4 billion high frequency rail HFR service plan as a response to delays faced by sharing tracks with freight trains The plan opts for a dedicated track between Toronto Ottawa Montreal and Quebec City offering more frequent trains although running at conventional speeds In Ontario Via would run a new rail line on currently underused tracks from Toronto to Ottawa through Peterborough instead of Kingston In Quebec corridor trains would travel from Montreal to Quebec City through Trois Rivieres on the north shore of the St Lawrence River rather than on the south shore through Drummondville 23 Via claimed this would allow them to run more trains in the corridor reduce trip times by 25 percent and improve on time performance to over 95 percent 47 Feasibility studies were funded by the federal government in the 2016 2018 budgets and the 2018 budget allowed for the funding of the fleet replacement portion of the plan though not the dedicated rail lines 48 Contrary to expectations the 2019 federal budget did not include a final decision for new funds for HFR 49 However in January 2020 Via announced the hiring of a joint venture of engineering firms AECOM and Arup to undertake a detailed engineering study of the proposal 50 The Toronto city council passed a motion supporting the project on March 30 2023 51 Service suspensions edit Two former Via routes The Malahat service ended in 2011 and Chaleur service ended in 2013 are currently suspended due to poor track conditions Via plans to reintroduce service once track upgrades have been completed 43 The Quebec government announced funds for repairs to Chaleur trackage in 2017 with a completion date stated only as being several years away 52 No concrete plan to restore trackage along The Malahat has been announced as of 2020 update nbsp A Via F40PH 2D leading the Winnipeg Churchill train November 2012 The service was suspended from May 2017 to December 2018 for track maintenance The Winnipeg Churchill train was disrupted by severe spring flooding on 23 May 2017 when the Hudson Bay Railway tracks were damaged beyond standard maintenance Winnipeg Gillam service continued 53 OmniTRAX the original owner of the track refused to make the repairs saying that the track was no longer viable despite the matching federal subsidy 54 The railroad was Churchill s only land link to southern Canada and its loss resulted in significant cost of living increases for residents along the corridor a stranded train was removed by ship in October 2017 54 Service to Churchill was restored in late 2018 after the tracks Churchill port and Churchill marine tank farm were purchased by Arctic Gateway Group 55 56 The federal government assisted in the purchase with 74 million of dedicated northern infrastructure money up front and an additional commitment of 43 million over 10 years 57 55 To restore passenger rail service before winter Arctic Gateway repaired 29 washouts in 35 days Although a special Via train arrived in Churchill on 1 November the first regular Via train arrived in Churchill on 4 December 560 days after service initially ceased 58 59 On February 13 2020 following several days of blockades during the nationwide Coastal GasLink Pipeline protests Via Rail announced that it would be shutting down most of its passenger train service across Canada until further notice with the exception of the Sudbury White River train line and the Winnipeg Churchill train between Churchill and The Pas 60 61 62 Later in 2020 in response to the COVID 19 pandemic nearly all Via Rail trains were suspended with the exception of the Winnipeg Churchill train as well as one train daily on each route within the corridor 63 64 Along with the previous protest related service suspensions it is the most extensive temporary reduction of service in Via Rail s history Travelling on Via editTravel on Via varies by region as much as class Many of Via s policies and protocols are the product of running a national train system with varying pressures and needs of different passengers communities and contexts The results are wide ranging travel experiences depending on the distance and location of the journey Unscheduled stops edit Some Via routes outside the corridor offer the option of unscheduled stops at places where there is no station With 48 hours notice a passenger can request to entrain or detrain at a specified milepost This option is available on all of the Adventure Routes as well as the Canadian between Capreol and Winnipeg 65 Classes of service edit nbsp Economy class seating in a Via Rail long distance coach car with one fully reclinedEscape Fare Discounted seats from economy class with restrictions on refunds and exchanges Economy Economy class seating in coach cars 66 Snacks and beverages are sold by employees with service carts in a lounge car or in a restaurant car Free Wi Fi access is provided in the Corridor and on the Ocean 67 nbsp Business class coach on the CorridorBusiness formerly called Via 1 First class seating available on most Corridor trains in southern Quebec and Ontario 68 Touring Available on the Skeena only in peak travel months 69 Sleeper Plus Sleeping accommodations aboard overnight trains This service class was formerly known as Sleeper in some cases including on the now suspended Chaleur 70 71 Each car has access to a washroom and optionally a shower Access to business lounges where available or the Sleeper Plus Lounge in Halifax is available on departure day Prestige Available on the Canadian only In addition to the Sleeper Plus amenities includes modernized luxurious sleeping accommodations at the rear of the train On board edit Amenities edit nbsp A Via dining car preparing for the first serving of breakfastSmoking is prohibited on all Via trains Smoking tobacco has been banned on the Corridor routes since 1993 72 and this policy was gradually extended to all trains while smoking cannabis was banned on all Via routes on the same day it was made legal in Canada The last remaining on board smoking was permitted in a smoker s lounge on some long distance routes only at certain times of day until 2002 73 Washrooms are provided for each car On sleeper cars every private room has its own separate washroom Food service varies by train All trains besides the Sudbury White River train offer snacks light meals and both alcoholic and non alcoholic beverages for purchase Long distance trains offer traditional sit down dining and full meals to sleeper class passengers Economy class passengers can purchase hot take out meals prepared in the dining car on long distance trains during the peak season and eat in the sit down dining car in the off peak 74 Complimentary Wi Fi service is available in the Corridor 75 76 77 Via was the first North American transportation service to offer Wi Fi to its passengers in early 2006 and was one of the first in the world to do so Wi Fi service has been added to the Ocean train in the service cars and to the Canadian 78 although connections are unreliable in most places outside urban centres Accessibility and safety concerns edit All Via trains are capable of accommodating wheelchairs although capacity is limited 79 Routes and connections editSee also List of Via Rail routes nbsp A map of Via Rail routes showing the frequency of Via trains on itVia operates in the provinces of Alberta British Columbia Manitoba New Brunswick Nova Scotia Ontario Quebec and Saskatchewan The only province or territory connected to the continental railway network and not served by Via is the Northwest Territories Newfoundland and Labrador Nunavut Prince Edward Island and Yukon have no rail connections to the continental network and thus no Via service Via operates over 475 trains per week over 19 routes marketed in four broad categories 80 Ontario and Quebec Corridor service comprising frequent regional and local trains between major cities in a band from Southwestern Ontario to Quebec City The vast majority of Via s trains over 400 per week operate here Cities served by Corridor trains include Windsor Sarnia London Toronto Kingston Ottawa Montreal and Quebec City In 2017 corridor service accounted for 95 percent of Via s ridership and 77 percent of its revenue 81 The Maritime Way Ocean providing long distance service between Quebec and the Maritime provinces In 2017 the Ocean accounted for 2 percent of Via s ridership and 3 percent of its revenue 81 The Great Western Way Canadian providing both long distance service between Southern Ontario and Western Canada as well as essential rail services through Northern Ontario In 2017 the Canadian accounted for 2 percent of Via s ridership and 20 percent of its revenue 81 Adventure Routes Five regional and long distance routes that offer essential rail transportation in rural northern areas In 2017 these routes in aggregate accounted for 1 percent of Via s ridership and revenue 81 The routes included in this category are Jasper Prince Rupert train former name Skeena Alberta and British Columbia Montreal Jonquiere train former name Saguenay Quebec Montreal Senneterre train former name Abitibi Quebec Sudbury White River train former name Lake Superior Ontario Winnipeg Churchill train former name Hudson Bay Manitoba and SaskatchewanUnlike Amtrak which gives every route a specific name most Via trains are identified only by their route number and destination The only named Via trains are the Canadian and the Ocean The five Adventure Routes were previously branded as the Skeena the Saguenay the Abitibi the Lake Superior and the Hudson Bay respectively and may still be referred to by these names in local usage Track ownership edit nbsp A Via Rail train passes by a Canadian National Railway train The majority of the track Via operates on is owned by CNR As of 2017 the mileage makeup of Via s route network by track owner host railway was as follows 43 note 1 84 per cent Canadian National Railway 8 per cent Hudson Bay Railway 4 per cent Canadian Pacific Railway 3 per cent Via Rail 2 per cent Metrolinx GO Transit In total about 88 percent of Via trackage is owned by Class I railroads 8 percent by shortline railroads and 5 percent by government agencies Connections edit nbsp The Maple Leaf train outside Niagara Falls station The route is jointly operated between Via and Amtrak providing Via riders with a connection to Amtrak stations based in New York The Maple Leaf operating between New York City and Toronto via Albany Buffalo and Niagara Falls is jointly managed by Via and Amtrak The train operates using Amtrak equipment but on the Canadian side of the border is staffed by Via employees and operated as a typical Via train Two other train routes link Canada and the US the Adirondack Montreal New York and the Amtrak Cascades Vancouver Seattle Portland While both of these routes share stations with Via at their Canadian termini they are fully operated by Amtrak and single ticket connections to Via trains are not offered Via also has connection agreements with several local and intercity bus operators car sharing services and airlines Passengers who are flying with some airlines can combine their air and rail trips under the same record locator 83 Rolling stock editMain article List of Via Rail rolling stock Via owns 74 locomotives and 501 passenger cars 84 Examples include the GMD F40PH 2 diesel locomotive and the famed Park class sleeper dome lounge cars found on the rear of the Canadian and the Jasper Prince Rupert train Carbon emissions editIn 2010 Via s carbon dioxide CO2 equivalent emissions per passenger kilometre were 0 117 kg 85 For comparison this is similar to Amtrak or a car with two people 86 about twice as high as the UK rail average 87 about four times the average US motorcoach 88 and about eight times a Finnish electric intercity train or fully loaded fifty seat coach 89 Accidents and incidents editOn 8 February 1986 a Via train collided with a CN freight train near Hinton Alberta killing 23 people and injuring 71 On 20 November 1994 at approximately 18 20 Via train No 66 travelling eastward at approximately 96 mph struck a piece of rail intentionally placed on the track at Mile 242 07 of the CN North America Kingston Subdivision in Brighton Ontario A fire erupted and the trailing portion of the locomotive and the first two passenger cars behind the locomotive became engulfed in flames Forty six of the 385 passengers were injured most while exiting the train in life threatening conditions 2 local residents were charged and convicted after an investigation by the local police 90 On 3 September 1997 the Canadian train No 2 from Vancouver to Toronto travelling eastward at 67 mph derailed at Mile 7 5 of the CN Wainwright Subdivision near Biggar Saskatchewan Thirteen of nineteen cars and the two locomotives derailed Seventy nine of the 198 passengers and crew on board were injured 1 fatally and 13 seriously Approximately 600 feet of main track was destroyed 91 The cause was determined to be an axle bearing failure which was detected but erroneously ignored Via was heavily criticized for a lack of attention to safety On 23 April 1999 Via train No 74 travelling eastward at Mile 46 7 on the CN Chatham Subdivision in Thamesville Ontario derailed after a switch was left open by a CN worker causing the train to jump the tracks and collide with stationary hoppers on the adjacent track derailing the locomotive and its four passenger cars The two engineers were killed and 77 of the 186 passengers injured four seriously Approximately 50 m of the main track and 100 m of the yard track were destroyed 92 On 12 April 2001 the Ocean bound for Montreal derailed in Stewiacke Nova Scotia at a manually operated main track switch A standard CN switch lock used to secure the switch in correct position had been tampered with The two locomotives and the first two cars continued on the main track but the following cars took a diverging route onto an industrial track adjacent to the main track Nine of the cars derailed and a farm supply building as well as the industrial track were destroyed Four occupants of the building escaped without injury prior to impact There were 132 persons on board the train 22 persons were transported to hospital in either Truro or Halifax Nine were seriously injured 93 A 15 year old boy pleaded guilty to the charge of mischief endangering life relating to the lock tampering 94 On 26 February 2012 Via Train No 92 en route to Toronto derailed in Burlington Ontario killing all three railroad engineers and injuring 46 three seriously The cause of the derailment is attributed to the excessive speed of the train travelling through a switch from track 2 to track 3 2013 Via Rail Canada terrorism plot In April 2013 two men inspired by al Qaeda were charged with plotting to derail a Via train in the Greater Toronto Area 95 In 2015 both men were convicted of terrorism related offenses and sentenced to life imprisonment 96 One of the two men was mentally unstable and misdiagnosed with schizophrenia 97 98 On 18 September 2013 a collision occurred between train No 51 and a double decker OC Transpo bus that failed to stop at a level crossing in Ottawa Ontario Six people were killed and 31 injured 11 critically all of whom were on the bus The impact resulted in the train derailing approximately 100 200 feet 30 61 m down the track 99 On 5 July 2018 a train with 16 passengers and five crew members derailed north of Hudson Bay Saskatchewan while travelling from Winnipeg to Churchill Passengers and crew sustained only minor injuries but it took several hours for emergency crews to arrive due to the remote location of the incident Paramedics and firefighters had to wait near the tracks for CN rail trucks to arrive that could transport them to the crash site 100 101 On 31 December 2019 a train with five crew and seven passengers derailed and tipped on its side near Katrime Manitoba No one was seriously injured 102 103 On 23 December 2022 Via shut down its Toronto Ottawa and Toronto Montreal corridors amid a winter storm with nine trains becoming trapped overnight including one on the Toronto Windsor corridor Two other Via trains that had departed were ordered to return to station A tree fell on train 55 from Ottawa to Toronto resulting in passengers being trapped on board for 15 hours a rescue train was required which coupled onto train 55 Subsequently a car on a CN train derailed in Kingston shutting down the entire Toronto Montreal corridor on 25 and 26 December On 25 December alone Via cancelled 25 trains Via compensated the hundreds of affected customers with refunds and vouchers 104 105 106 Coat of Arms editCoat of arms of Via Rail nbsp Notes Granted 15 May 2020 107 Crest A locomotive wheel Or issuant from a coronet erable Gules Escutcheon Per fess Sable and Or in chief a bar fracted of five pieces Or and in base two bendlets sinister Sable all within a bordure Or Supporters Two lynx Or each standing on a sandy base set with a bed of crushed stone Proper Motto Via Per Fines Nostros The Way Across The Country See also edit nbsp Trains portal nbsp Railways portal nbsp Companies portalVia Rail Canada Police Service List of Via Rail stations List of Via Rail rolling stock Proposed high speed rail by countryNotes edit Since the most recent corporate plan was published the Guelph Subdivision used by Via between Kitchener and London has reverted to CN from the Goderich Exeter Railway 82 References edit a b Annual Report 2018 PDF Via Rail Canada Retrieved May 13 2019 permanent dead link Sustainable Mobility Report 2018 PDF Report Via Rail Canada p 5 Archived PDF from the original on February 26 2020 Retrieved May 2 2020 Canada s Pacific railway an iron spine for a paper nation Engelsberg ideas in Swedish Retrieved January 5 2024 a b Nelligan Tom 1982 Via Rail Canada The first five years PJT Publishing ISBN 0 937658 08 1 Jason Fekete February 29 2016 Via Rail seeking federal budget funding for 1 3B passenger car upgrade in Toronto Montreal corridor National Post Retrieved March 2 2016 a b Drost Philip Desson Craig January 1 2023 What we can learn about the future of rail from its past CBC Archived from the original on January 1 2023 Retrieved January 7 2024 Transport 2000 Hotline Transport2000 ca January 30 2004 Archived from the original on April 20 2011 Retrieved March 10 2011 Via upgrades to cost 700 million Archived from the original on June 5 2004 Via gets hundreds of millions in federal funding CBC October 11 2007 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved October 11 2007 Backgrounder New Funding For Via Rail Canada PDF Via Rail October 11 2007 Archived PDF from the original on October 25 2007 Retrieved October 23 2007 Beeby Dean October 20 2007 Via train late You re not alone Toronto The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on March 14 2008 Retrieved October 23 2007 Canada s Economic Action Plan Department of Finance of Canada January 27 2009 Archived from the original on March 7 2012 Retrieved December 28 2011 Update Strike Action Via Rail Canada cancels all services effective immediately Via Rail Canada Inc Archived from the original on July 25 2009 Via Rail CAW reach tentative agreement to avoid strike Progressive Railroading June 28 2010 Retrieved June 29 2010 Via Rail continues its modernization and takes action to better meet customer demand Press release Via Rail June 27 2012 Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Retrieved June 27 2012 Via train service to Sarnia cut in half Archived from the original on January 15 2013 Retrieved July 6 2012 Niagara travellers impacted by Via cuts Archived from the original on January 15 2013 Retrieved July 6 2012 Via Rail blames low ridership for cuts to Kitchener service Archived from the original on October 18 2015 Retrieved July 6 2012 London area hit hard by nationwide Via Rail cuts Archived from the original on February 21 2014 Retrieved July 6 2012 Via Rail cuts means fewer trains to from Windsor Archived from the original on July 4 2012 Retrieved July 6 2012 Via Rail service between Matapedia New Carlisle and Gaspe suspended Archived from the original on August 26 2013 Retrieved August 23 2013 Chow Olivia Bill C 577 Via Rail Canada Act An Act respecting Via Rail Canada and making consequential amendments to another Act Archived from the original on July 24 2020 Retrieved May 2 2020 a b De Souza Mike Robinson Megan March 11 2020 Does Via Rail s survival depend on a new route through Ontario and Quebec Global News Retrieved May 3 2020 dead link Via Rail s 150 passes for unlimited travel sold out Archived from the original on May 31 2018 Retrieved June 12 2018 a b Winter s extreme weather made trains extremely late Via Rail reports The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on March 9 2021 Retrieved June 4 2019 a b 2018 Annual Public Meeting Questions and Answers Part 1 PDF Via Rail Canada Archived PDF from the original on January 25 2022 Retrieved June 4 2019 a b c d Opinion Passenger train service falling off the rails Vancouver Sun August 29 2016 Archived from the original on January 25 2022 Retrieved June 4 2019 a b Via train chronically late Rail advocates October 22 2018 Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 a b What s holding up Via s Canadian Updated Railway Age May 30 2018 Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 Small Kaylen May 24 2018 Pain on the train Via Rail passengers frustrated with delays on cross Canada journey CBC News Archived from the original on November 26 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 Travel credits www viarail ca Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 New Via sked to keep Canadian on time in Jasper Jasper s source for news sports arts culture and more The Fitzhugh Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 Did Via Rail keep its promise Let s ask Riding the buses December 6 2018 Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 Lovely trip Review of Via Rail Canada Quebec Canada TripAdvisor Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 9 2019 Via Rail Selects Siemens Canada to Replace its Quebec Windsor Corridor Fleet Archived from the original on December 20 2018 Retrieved December 19 2018 Via Rail places 989 million train order with Siemens Archived from the original on December 19 2018 Retrieved December 19 2018 VIA RAIL UNVEILS ITS MANDATORY VACCINATION POLICY VIA Rail Archived from the original on December 10 2021 Retrieved December 10 2021 Transport Canada March 9 2022 Government of Canada launches the next phase in the procurement process for High Frequency Rail Government of Canada Retrieved November 3 2022 Unifor Via Rail P3 privatization must be stopped in its tracks www newswire ca Retrieved November 3 2022 Back on Track Back on Track Retrieved November 3 2022 a b c General The Office of the Secretary to the Governor November 12 2020 Via Rail Canada Inc Civil Institution reg gg ca Archived from the original on September 14 2021 Retrieved September 14 2021 Taylor Roger November 9 2015 Via looks at expanding Atlantic service Chronicle Herald Herald Limited Archived from the original on November 20 2015 Retrieved November 20 2015 a b c d Summary of the 2017 2021 Corporate Plan and 2017 Operating and Capital Budgets PDF Via Rail Canada Archived PDF from the original on July 13 2018 Retrieved February 26 2019 Campbell Francis December 8 2018 Commuter rail far from dead in Halifax The Chronicle Herald Archived from the original on February 26 2019 Retrieved February 26 2019 Woodford Zane June 18 2019 Halifax council kills commuter rail proposal Toronto Star Archived from the original on February 3 2020 Retrieved February 3 2020 Peddle Stuart June 19 2019 Halifax commuter rail not coming but councillor still holding out hope The Chronicle Herald Archived from the original on February 3 2020 Retrieved February 3 2020 Proposal for High Frequency Rail in the Quebec City Toronto Corridor Via Rail Archived from the original on June 5 2020 Retrieved May 5 2020 Platt Brian February 28 2018 Federal budget approves new fleet of trains for Via Rail but dedicated tracks still under study National Post Retrieved June 12 2018 dead link Via high Frequency Rail HFR Project not part of 2019 Federal Budget but Continues to be Evaluated Transport Action Ontario March 27 2019 Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 High Frequency Rail AECOM and Arup consortium selected as Owner s Engineers Press release Montreal Quebec Canada Via Rail Canada Inc January 28 2020 Archived from the original on June 5 2020 Retrieved May 5 2020 DeClerq Katherine March 31 2023 The Toronto to Montreal high speed train just got another step closer CTV News Retrieved April 4 2023 Quebec funds Gaspe railway revival May 9 2017 Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved June 12 2018 Via Rail service between Churchill and Gillam suspended indefinitely due to closure of the railway infrastructure in northern Manitoba www newswire ca Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 9 2019 a b Ship brings propane to Churchill will leave with stranded Via Rail train CTV News October 15 2017 Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 a b We are free Churchill celebrates return of train service with prime minister Edmonton Journal November 1 2018 Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 9 2019 Newsroom Arctic Gateway Group Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 Canada Western Economic Diversification September 14 2018 Government of Canada announces support for acquisition and repair of Churchill rail line by Arctic Gateway Group gcnws Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 It s very exciting First rail tourists in 560 days depart for Churchill Man CBC News December 2 2018 Archived from the original on December 7 2018 Retrieved June 4 2019 Churchill reconnected cangeotravel ca Archived from the original on June 4 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 Tasker John Paul February 13 2020 Via Rail cancels most trains nationwide CN closes Eastern Canadian network as Indigenous protests continue Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved February 14 2020 Shah Maryam February 13 2020 Via Rail cancels most trains across the country as CN shuts down rails in eastern Canada Global News Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Retrieved February 14 2020 Slaughter Graham February 13 2020 Via Rail cancels trains across Canada CN shuts down Eastern Canada network amid pipeline protests CTV News Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved May 15 2020 COVID 19 Via Rail continues suspension of all Toronto Vancouver passenger trains until May 1 vancouversun com Archived from the original on April 17 2020 Retrieved April 24 2020 Group Travelweek March 23 2020 Via Rail announces service changes in response to COVID 19 Travelweek www travelweek ca Archived from the original on May 19 2020 Retrieved April 24 2020 Stops in between two stations Via Rail Archived from the original on July 18 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 Seat Assignment February 11 2014 Archived from the original on August 6 2014 Retrieved August 4 2014 Train routes by region Via Rail Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved March 10 2011 Via Rail Helpful links for the business traveller Viarail ca Archived from the original on January 26 2012 Retrieved January 12 2012 Classes aboard the Jasper Prince Rupert train Via Rail Archived from the original on July 31 2009 Retrieved March 10 2011 Classes aboard the Montreal Halifax train the Ocean Via Rail Archived from the original on June 24 2009 Retrieved March 10 2011 Classes aboard the Toronto Vancouver train the Canadian Via Rail Archived from the original on August 13 2011 Retrieved March 10 2011 Smoking to be banned on Via train The Gazette Montreal QC April 15 1993 pp A3 DeMont John August 2002 All Aboard Maclean s 115 34 16 Via Rail Onboard menus for all trains Archived from the original on February 16 2013 Retrieved February 24 2013 On Train Entertainment Via Rail Archived from the original on June 21 2009 Retrieved September 30 2010 As of November 2008 the Internet Wi Fi services on Via Rail Canada trains running between Windsor Toronto Ottawa Montreal and Quebec City are operated by 21Net Archived from the original on June 13 2010 NOMAD awarded contract by Via Rail and Government of Canada Nomad Digital Ltd December 13 2010 Archived from the original on July 17 2011 Via Rail Free Wi Fi Viarail ca Archived from the original on June 21 2009 Retrieved February 24 2013 Via Rail Special needs Archived from the original on February 16 2013 Retrieved February 24 2013 Explore Our Train Journeys Via Rail Canada Archived from the original on December 9 2018 Retrieved December 7 2018 a b c d Via Rail Annual Report 2017 PDF Via Rail Canada p 2 Archived PDF from the original on July 13 2018 Retrieved August 7 2018 Host Stephen C November 20 2018 GEXR leased segment reverts to CN Railway Age New York Archived from the original on November 20 2018 Retrieved March 11 2019 Our partners February 15 2018 Archived from the original on April 12 2016 Retrieved April 20 2016 Train fleet Rolling stock Via Rail corpo viarail ca Archived from the original on January 24 2020 Retrieved February 5 2020 Email from Bruno Riendeau Senior Advisor Environment to Alaric Hall October 20 2011 Cf http docs wri org wri co2comm 2002 commuting protected xls Archived January 12 2016 at the Wayback Machine sheet 8 cell C36 figures from 2002 and http www tc gc ca eng programs environment ecofreight about voluntary racemissions2007 2 1134 htm Archived May 17 2013 at the Wayback Machine respectively http docs wri org wri co2comm 2002 commuting protected xls Archived January 12 2016 at the Wayback Machine sheet 8 cell C33 figures from 2002 Updated Comparison of Energy Use amp CO2 Emissions From Different Transportation Modes PDF Archived from the original PDF on May 15 2013 Retrieved November 23 2012 table 1 1 figures from 2007 Sustainable development PDF March 24 2009 Archived from the original PDF on March 24 2009 Updated Comparison of Energy Use amp CO2 Emissions From Different Transportation Modes PDF January 6 2009 Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved August 14 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Respectively http lipasto vtt fi yksikkopaastot henkiloliikennee raideliikennee junat henkiloe htm Archived February 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine figures for 2007 http www lipasto vtt fi yksikkopaastot henkiloliikennee tieliikennee linja autote latiee htm Archived July 19 2011 at the Wayback Machine figures for 2010 Railway Investigation Report R94T0357 Transportation Safety Board of Canada June 26 1996 Archived from the original on April 21 2015 Retrieved September 10 2015 Railway Investigation Report R97H0009 Transportation Safety Board of Canada August 5 1998 Archived from the original on February 7 2015 Retrieved August 16 2015 Canada Government of Canada Transportation Safety Board of February 13 2001 Railway Investigation Report R99H0007 Archived from the original on March 12 2017 Retrieved December 12 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Railway Investigation Report R01M0024 Transportation Safety Board of Canada January 7 2003 Archived from the original on September 23 2015 Retrieved August 10 2015 Teen faces victims of N S train wreck CBC CBC News Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved August 10 2015 Blackwell Tom April 22 2013 Canadian terrorist plot to attack Via train thwarted two arrested RCMP National Post Archived from the original on June 21 2017 Retrieved April 23 2013 Diana Mehta Men convicted in Via terror plot handed life sentences Archived January 6 2017 at the Wayback Machine Canadian Press September 23 2016 Richard Warnica Legal battle over convicted terrorist Chiheb Esseghaier s sanity set as lawyers appointed for appeal Archived June 21 2017 at Archive It National Post January 13 2016 Richard Warnica Would be terrorist Chiheb Esseghaier is clearly insane but should that even matter in court Archived June 21 2017 at Archive It National Post August 28 2015 Commisso Christina Puzic Sonja September 18 2013 Via train and city bus crash in Ottawa at least six dead 30 injured CTV News Archived from the original on January 25 2022 Retrieved September 18 2013 Canada Transportation Safety Board of July 11 2018 Rail transportation safety investigation R18W0168 Transportation Safety Board www tsb gc ca Archived from the original on October 26 2019 Retrieved October 26 2019 Railway incident presents emergency responders with unique challenge www saskhealthauthority ca Archived from the original on October 26 2019 Retrieved October 26 2019 Manitoba RCMP respond to passenger train derailment near Portage La Prairie CJOB Archived from the original on February 5 2020 Retrieved February 5 2020 Government of Canada Transportation Safety Board of Canada January 20 2020 Rail transportation safety investigation R19W0329 www tsb gc ca Retrieved January 28 2022 Passengers reach destinations after storm strands hundreds on Via Rail Toronto Star December 24 2022 Via Rail service between Toronto Ottawa and Montreal cancelled due to winter storm and CN train derailment The Globe and Mail December 24 2022 Via Rail cancels 25 trains on Christmas Day after CN derailment Toronto Star December 25 2022 Via Rail Canada Inc Canadian Heraldic Authority Retrieved September 21 2023 Further reading editAllen Tom 2001 Rolling Home A Cross Canada Railroad Memoir Toronto Penguin ISBN 0 670 88473 1 Greenlaw Christopher C N 2007 VIA Rail Saint Paul MN MBI ISBN 9780760325292 OCLC 71286639 Pindell Terry 1992 Last train to Toronto a Canadian rail odyssey New York Henry Holt and Company Inc ISBN 0 8050 1574 4 Hanus Chris amp Shaske John 2009 Canada By Train The Complete Via Rail Travel Guide ISBN 978 0 9730897 5 2External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to VIA Rail category nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Across Canada by train nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Rail travel in Canada Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Via Rail amp oldid 1197950753, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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