Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Seeks Transportation Agency Clout In Railway Battle With Canadian Pacific

The Canadian Press, 12 Aug, 2015 12:26 PM
    VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver is fighting back as it battles plans by Canadian Pacific Railway (TSX:CP) to resurrect train traffic on a rail spur cutting through some of the city's priciest neighbourhoods.
     
    In a release, Vancouver calls on the Canadian Transportation Agency to issue an order overruling CPR's removal of the Arbutus Corridor from a list of lines due to be mothballed.
     
    Vancouver also wants the agency to order the railway to make an offer to sell the 11-kilometre corridor at its 2004 net salvage value, which is the after-tax value of the land, minus clean-up costs.
     
    Vancouver and CPR have been arguing over the future of the land since trains stopped running on the tracks 15 years ago.
     
    Mayor Gregor Robertson has accused the railway of bullying, alleging the company rejected the city's fair market offer to buy the land before tearing up community gardens planted beside the rails, and it's now proceeding with plans to reactivate cargo trains.
     
    In January, a B.C. Supreme Court judge dismissed Vancouver's application for an injunction halting CPR's removal of the gardens, but also found the city has raised legitimate questions about whether the railway has abandoned the land.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Energy East Pipeline Will Cost More Than $12 Billion, TransCanada Says

    Energy East Pipeline Will Cost More Than $12 Billion, TransCanada Says
    TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP), the company planning to build the controversial cross-Canada oil pipeline, had been estimating it would cost $12 billion.

    Energy East Pipeline Will Cost More Than $12 Billion, TransCanada Says

    One Person Is Dead, Dozens Injured After Bus Crash On Highway 1 In B.C.

    One Person Is Dead, Dozens Injured After Bus Crash On Highway 1 In B.C.
    One man was killed in a collision between a tour bus carrying dozens of people and a car on a notorious stretch of Highway 1 south of Chase, in B.C.'s Interior, say police and firefighters.

    One Person Is Dead, Dozens Injured After Bus Crash On Highway 1 In B.C.

    Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental

    Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental
    Forty-five-year-old Robert Luggi and 42-year-old Carl Charlie were working at Babine Forest Products in the community 225 kilometres west of Prince George, when the explosion occurred

    Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental

    Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer

    Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer
    City officials have dumped chicken manure on campsites, said David Wotherspoon, a lawyer with Pivot Legal Society.

    Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer

    Bulldozer And Excavator Worth $500,000 Go Missing, B.C. Police Attempt To Dredge Up Suspects

    Bulldozer And Excavator Worth $500,000 Go Missing, B.C. Police Attempt To Dredge Up Suspects
    Police were called out to a site down a forest service road near Tumbler Ridge on July 15.

    Bulldozer And Excavator Worth $500,000 Go Missing, B.C. Police Attempt To Dredge Up Suspects

    'Confusion' And 'Miscommunication' Slowed Vancouver Fuel Spill Response: Report

    'Confusion' And 'Miscommunication' Slowed Vancouver Fuel Spill Response: Report
    The review released Friday also found that Canadian Coast Guard staff were unsure of their roles and a faulty provincial alert system meant the city was not notified until 12 hours later.

    'Confusion' And 'Miscommunication' Slowed Vancouver Fuel Spill Response: Report