Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

'We are serious': Alberta government's master plan to expand rail passenger service

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Apr, 2024 12:05 PM
  • 'We are serious': Alberta government's master plan to expand rail passenger service

But at this point it could be decades if and when the finished product comes to fruition.

Expanding rail service has been discussed extensively for the past 15 years in Alberta but Premier Danielle Smith says the time to move forward is now with record population growth and more crowded highways.

"Those of us who commute regularly already see and experience our province's busy roads and highways," Smith, standing in front of a steam engine at Calgary's Heritage Park, told reporters Monday.

"Expanding our roads, freeways and highways to be six or eight or 10 lanes all the way across is not always feasible, nor is it always wise."

The plan will look forward decades and identify concrete actions that can be taken now as well as in the future to build the optimal passenger rail system for the province.

The plan will assess the feasibility of passenger rail in Alberta, including regional, commuter and high-speed services.

"Rail systems networks are a reliable fact of life in Eastern Canada and the United States and all across Europe," she said.

"And yet here in Alberta we've been behind for decades."

Transportation Minister Devin Dreeshen said the plan comprises six phases, the first of which would connect rail from both Edmonton and Calgary's downtowns to their airports and surrounding communities.

A high-speed rail service connecting Edmonton and Calgary is also a priority.

"We are serious. I think it would be very easy just to throw money at a proponent who walks by and say 'OK, lets start building trains in Alberta,'" Dreeshen said.

"We're actually taking the time to develop what a provincewide network could be, and do that feasibility study and cost analysis to really understand it as opposed to jumping in with a new government announcement."

Smith said setting up a Crown corporation, similar to Metrolinx in Ontario, seems the best fit. It would develop the infrastructure, oversee daily operations and plan for future system expansion.

The plan will include a cost-benefit analysis and determine what's required from government including governance and a 15-year delivery plan.

"Nothing about this plan is going to be unilateral," said Smith.

"It will take shape only after consultations with municipalities, with industry, with Indigenous communities and all Albertans interested in the future of passenger rail."

MORE National ARTICLES

Passenger levels at YVR to hit pre-pandemic levels in the coming week

Passenger levels at YVR to hit pre-pandemic levels in the coming week
Passenger levels at Vancouver International Airport are expected to be almost completely recovered to pre-pandemic levels over the next week. Y-V-R officials say the airport is expecting an average of 60-thousand-177 passengers per day this week, with a total reaching 421-thousand.

Passenger levels at YVR to hit pre-pandemic levels in the coming week

Man steals over 1M from 9 investors

Man steals over 1M from 9 investors
A North Vancouver man has pleaded guilty to one count of theft after an investigation found he stole more than one-million-dollars from nine investors. A statement from B-C Securities Commission says the 55-year-old man was arrested in October 2022 and remains on bail, entering the guilty plea last week with sentencing scheduled for early May.

Man steals over 1M from 9 investors

108-year-old newspaper buyout in Prince George

108-year-old newspaper buyout in Prince George
Cameron Stolz is the new owner of the 108-year-old Prince George Citizen after buying the paper from Glacier Media. Stolz, a businessman who owns a toy and comics store, said he entered talks to buy the weekly newspaper last November after outlets in Fort St. John and Dawson Creek closed, followed soon after by the newspaper in Kamloops.

108-year-old newspaper buyout in Prince George

B.C. minister Robinson stepping down over remarks that angered pro-Palestinian groups

B.C. minister Robinson stepping down over remarks that angered pro-Palestinian groups
British Columbia's Post-Secondary Education Minister Selina Robinson is stepping down over her remarks that modern Israel was founded on "a crappy piece of land," after her repeated apologies failed to quell the outcry from pro-Palestinian groups and others. Premier David Eby said Robinson's "belittling" remarks were incompatible with her remaining in cabinet, although she will stay in the NDP caucus.

B.C. minister Robinson stepping down over remarks that angered pro-Palestinian groups

Surrey afternoon shooting lands 1 in hospital

Surrey afternoon shooting lands 1 in hospital
On Friday, just after 1:30pm, Surrey RCMP received a report of shots fired in the 8400 block of 120 Street.  Frontline officers attended the scene and located a man who appeared to be suffering from gunshot wounds. The victim was transported to hospital with serious injuries.

Surrey afternoon shooting lands 1 in hospital

First cases of fatal chronic wasting disease found in B.C. deer

First cases of fatal chronic wasting disease found in B.C. deer
Researchers say a deadly disease starts out slow but has the potential to devastate British Columbia's deer population over time, after the discovery of the first cases in the province. The concerns come after the B.C. government confirmed two cases of chronic wasting disease found in animals south of Cranbrook in the Kootenay region.

First cases of fatal chronic wasting disease found in B.C. deer