If anything, it's an anti-bus attitude, because as much as I prefer trains and would love to explore every corner of this country by rail, as a taxpayer I'm realistic enough to concede that buses offer much better value-for-money, except where you have to transport very high passenger loads, and that clearly favors bus services .
Just have a look at these figures, comparing the financials of VIA's Corridor rail operations with those of Ontario Northland's bus operations:
Metric | VIA Rail
(2018, entire network) | VIA Rail
(2018, Corridor only) | Ontario Northland
(2018, Motor Coach Services only) | VIA Rail (rail)
vs. ONTC (bus) |
---|
Scheduled timetable volume | 10,983,773 km | 8,701,131 km | 3,821,706 km | 2.9 (Corridor: 2.3) times |
Direct operating expenses | $328.8 million | $217.0 million | $11.6 million | 28.3 (18.7) times |
- per timetable-km | $29.94 | $24.94 | $3.04 | 9.9 (8.2) times |
Fully-allocated operating expenses | $665.2 million | $448.8 million | $14.5 million | 45.9 (31.0) times |
- per timetable-km | $60.56 | $51.58 | $3.80 | 15.9 (13.6) times |
Operating deficit (Subsidy) | $272.6 million | $143.4 million | $3.6 million | 76.5 (40.3) times |
- per timetable-km | $24.82 | $16.48 | $0.93 | 26.7 (17.7) times |
Compiled from:
previous posts posted on Urban Toronto, using figures from
VIA Rail's Summary of the Corporate Plan and
Annual Plans 2017 and 2018, as well as
Ontario Northland's 2017-2018 Annual Report (p. 34)
As much as I personally hate myself whenever I have to take intercity buses, I can't stop myself when reading all these passenger rail proposals brought forward by fellow contributors like
@Seaboard92 (I thought I had just seen him posting an interesting comparison of Canada's transcontinental network with that of the Trans-Siberian Railway just below your post, but did he delete it?) from imagining what kind of tightly knit intercity bus network could be funded if the required incremental subsidy need for such a passenger rail service expansion was instead used towards setting up a public nationwide bus service. Even though I'm still waiting for nothing more impatiently than HFR finally being approved and funded, I fault the current Prime Minister for nothing more than for letting his cabinet sit on its hands rather than saving Greyhound's routes and transferring them under a public agency like VIA Rail, but with a proper mandate and framework which allows federal and provincial governments to jointly fund the network according to their priorities...
I did not delete it it was deemed off topic and deleted by the moderator. Even though if you ask me comparing the trans con Canadian routes to the Trans Siberian very much on topic because Canada is a country much like Russia it only has two mainlines across the country with a dense region around the area of most population. In Russia that is the Golden Ring while Canada is really just Quebec and Southern Ontario. What irks me is I took thirty minutes to make a good conclusive argument about the similarities and needs that required some timetable research. So I am somewhat upset that it was deleted.
But the basic point I made is this.
You have two mainlines across Canada the CN route which hits the following major cities or ridership draws Toronto, Greater Sudbury, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Edmonton, Jasper, and Vancouver.
The CP route hits these locations. Toronto, Greater Sudbury, Thunder Bay, Winnipeg, Brandon, Regina, Medicine Hat, Calgary, Banff/Lake Louise, Vancouver.
When you look at the two countries they are remarkably similar as most of the population lives in the same general line across the country with not much north or south of that. Partially because the further north you go the more inhospitable the climate is.
Now the Trans Siberian has a higher population on it than both the CN or CP routes but it's also like what twice the length.
I mean the Trans Siberian has Moskva, Yaroslavl, Kirov, Yekaterinburg, Tyumen, Omsk, Novosibirsk, Krasnoyarsk, Irkutsk, Ulan Ude, Chita, Khabarovsk, and Vladivostok. And a whole lot of nothing in between just like the CN route between Greater Sudbury and Winnipeg.
Now the Russians have some advantages the Canadians don't have namely RZD runs both the passengers and the freight, it's all double tracked, and electric. But over the entire length of the Trans Sib you have only two trains that run the full length (one of which is every other day), then from Moskva east you have several trains that run halfway ish or to one of the intermediates. From Omsk on to Vladivostok you gain an additional train that has a ton of thru cars on it (Basically imagine if the Canadian ran Winnipeg-Vancouver but with thru cars coming from Chicago, Churchill, Calgary, Medicine Hat, ETC) that train was massive it was at least 20 cars when I was on it (but when I boarded it was only 4). Then you have a few trains that run parts in the middle like the Adler-Tomsk Train.
So if we were making that about Canada that would be like having three-five trains a day over various portions of the route some with different stopping patterns and destinations. Now that would make it a much better for western Canada but I can't imagine it would draw enough ridership to make it work.
Now Russia has just as many airports and a well developed civil aviation sphere (arguably better than Canada and USA in terms of on board experience) and a well developed bus network. Now the roads are supposed to be super crappy but I didn't find them too terrible when I was on them in rural Siberia. Now Canada probably has better roads however I haven't been on them to prove it.
So making a Canada-Russia comparison I think is somewhat on topic when we are discussing VIA Rail and service expansion in the western provinces. I would say VIA has the better rolling stock, and the Canadian has a significantly better on board experience, but the staff are equal at both railroads.
As far as making an inter-city bus network in Canada I agree with you too it is needed. The trains can't service everywhere and you've lost a lot of branch lines that once had service, and even some of those don't make economic sense right now. But those people do need some form of a transport system. I think with Greyhound imploding that was a bad day for the citizens of Canada and the mobility especially in the rural areas.
Now I think VIA should also serve in some meaningful way to these smaller towns. Small towns need service in proportion to their needs, just like the larger metropolitan areas do as well.