Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

West Coast Express commuter trains resume Monday as rail staff ordered back to work

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2024 03:32 PM
  • West Coast Express commuter trains resume Monday as rail staff ordered back to work

Metro Vancouver's transit authority says the West Coast Express commuter train service shut down last week due to the Canada-wide rail stoppage will resume operations this week.

TransLink issued a statement saying services will resume their normal schedules starting Monday, although there may be some delays "due to freight traffic backlog."

The commuter rail line linking Mission, B.C., and other Fraser Valley communities to downtown Vancouver has been shut down since Wednesday night due to the lack of rail traffic controllers on the Canadian Pacific Kansas City tracks the service uses.

On Saturday, the Canada Industrial Relations Board imposed binding arbitration in the dispute between workers and the country's two major railways, Canadian National and CPKC, ordering thousands of rail employees back to work.

The resumption comes as another TransLink service, the door-to-door HandyDART, narrowly avoided a strike. Workers suspended job action that may have resulted in a strike Monday in order for union members to vote on a final contract offer from employer Transdev Canada.

Lower Mainland communities such as Maple Ridge served by the West Coast Express train lamented last week's operational disruptions, citing residents heavy dependence on rail and other transit services to get to and from work.

MORE National ARTICLES

Board orders deportation for trucker who caused horrific Humboldt Broncos crash

Board orders deportation for trucker who caused horrific Humboldt Broncos crash
The truck driver who caused the horrific bus crash involving the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team was ordered Friday to be deported to India. An Immigration and Refugee Board hearing for Jaskirat Singh Sidhu announced its decision in a 15-minute virtual hearing.

Board orders deportation for trucker who caused horrific Humboldt Broncos crash

Canada 7th in foreign aid spending, but a fifth goes to refugees inside the country

Canada 7th in foreign aid spending, but a fifth goes to refugees inside the country
While Canada is one of the top contributors to foreign aid among some of the world's richest countries, a fifth of the spending never leaves Canada's borders. Some 19 per cent of Canada's aid reported to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development last year benefited refugees and Ukrainians within Canada.

Canada 7th in foreign aid spending, but a fifth goes to refugees inside the country

'Looking over our shoulders': A killing looms large in a little B.C. town

'Looking over our shoulders': A killing looms large in a little B.C. town
Something has shifted in the pretty little village of Lumby, B.C.  It's subtle, say residents of the community of 2,000 people, nestled in the hills of the North Okanagan in B.C.'s Interior.  

'Looking over our shoulders': A killing looms large in a little B.C. town

Missing kayaker found dead

Missing kayaker found dead
Mounties in Prince George say a kayaker reported missing on Monday is dead. They say the man's body was found yesterday after a search involving police officers, local search and rescue volunteers and an R-C-M-P helicopter.

Missing kayaker found dead

NDP slam Liberals for slow reunification programs for relatives stuck in Gaza, Sudan

NDP slam Liberals for slow reunification programs for relatives stuck in Gaza, Sudan
The NDP has accused the government of bungling measures introduced months ago that were meant to bring relatives of Canadians from conflict zones in Sudan and the Gaza Strip to safety.

NDP slam Liberals for slow reunification programs for relatives stuck in Gaza, Sudan

New bill would let Canadians to pass citizenship rights down to children born abroad

New bill would let Canadians to pass citizenship rights down to children born abroad
A new government bill tabled in the House of Commons on Thursday would allow Canadians to pass citizenship rights down to their children born outside the country — a move that would add an unknown number of new citizens. In 2009, former Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper's government changed the law so that Canadian parents who were born abroad could not pass down their citizenship, unless their child was born in Canada.  

New bill would let Canadians to pass citizenship rights down to children born abroad