Thursday, February 13, 2025

VIA and CN in Federal Court - The Facts, Part 2

On January 13, 2025 CN made a motion to the Federal Court to be heard in Ottawa on February 7, 2025, entitled "An order striking VIA's Notice of Application November 12, 2024 and dismissing the Application entirely." VIA had applied to Federal Court seeking a judicial review on November 12, 2024 claiming CN had not performed a risk assessment nor provided evidence to substantiate the grade crossing speed reductions it imposed on VIA's new Venture trains at 304 Corridor grade crossings on October 11, 2024. In a statement of claim, VIA says CN’s orders to slow down for numerous crossings, or lengthen its Venture trains, are unreasonable and have no basis as a safety concern. The next hearing in the judicial review will be held in Montreal on February 25, 2025. I've presented the process so far in this post

While the next steps of the case are about to unfold, in this post I'll be highlighting more of the publicly-available material that both CN and VIA have recently presented to the Court. Here you'll find important information recently submitted to support CN's response. The affidavit of one CN manager, supported by mostly-relevant technical material as well as records of email communication comprise the 1,073 pages of material. Frankly, though some of it may be background for citations in CN's legal strategy, much of it seems redundant to the layman.  

VIA submitted the affidavit of one expert as part of its application, in addition to the VIA management and expert witness material already submitted. For this last submission, VIA submitted 79 pages of material. Much of it is related to the Rudin-Brown expert report (see end of this post), with some related to the dates and reasons for its late inclusion in its application. 

Some of the material in this post somewhat overlaps that presented in The Facts, Part 1. Notwithstanding that, I've decided to not intermingle the material, presenting it herein as it was submitted to the Court chronologically, as part of the judicial review process.

CN's MOTION TO STRIKE VIA'S NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW

CN's Motion to Strike is supported by an affidavit from a CN manager who has already taken responsibility for recognizing the sudden need, on behalf of CN, to issue speed reductions for VIA's Venture-equipped Corridor trains. The supporting material reinforces CN's initial response to VIA's application, augmented by email communications not previously submitted to the Court, 

CN's grounds for its Motion to Strike: 
  • Their claim that CN is not a "federal board, commission or other tribunal" as required to be included by Section 18 of the Federal Courts Act. A claim that the Court lacks the jurisdiction to hear the Application. The Train Services Agreement (TSA) between CN and VIA gives CN control over the movement of VIA's passenger trains providing CN with absolute discretion, including CN's ability to make private arrangements and issue General Bulletin Orders (GBO's).
  • VIA Loss-Of-Shunt (LOS): VIA's application arises from the LOS phenomenon, which CN has studied for more than ten years in the US. CN is aware that the Ventures are at an increased risk of LOS since they are lighter and shorter trains than VIA's Legacy (LRC and HEP) trains. 
CN lays out the following timeline to support its grounds:
  • In 2021, VIA did not challenge CN's right to impose restrictions on Ventures if necessary. 
  • In November, 2022 CN began ongoing testing for LOS when Ventures began operating QMO.
  • In early 2024, CN recorded short warning times on the Drummondville Sub (DRMV). CN issued orders for those crossings that VIA did not challenge or seek judicial review.
  • On October 11, 2024 after VIA had begun operating Venture trains in the Corridor outside of the QMO, CN took action to protect the safety of its crossings by issuing Crossing Supplement 1. 
  • On January 12, 2025 CN issued GBO's "to correct inadvertent clerical errors" in the first two versions of the crossing supplement. (Some crossings were not owned by CN, some crossings that did not exist were mistakenly included in both versions of the crossing supplement, now struck from the crossing supplement.)
Concluding with:
  • "This is a private, commercial dispute between contractual counterparties, arising out of CN's exercise of discretion under the TSA [Train Service Agreement]."

(Watch for an upcoming post on the 2009 and 2023 versions of the CN-VIA TSA.) Note that in the October 11, 2024 bullet point, CN adds zero further evidence in the accompanying affidavit as to why their speed reductions were made effective that date. While I continue to (perhaps naively) expect the submission of some solid technical evidence, critical operational exigencies, or demonstrated safety risk beyond a general hypothetical situation that might occur, leading directly to the issuing of the CN crossing supplement, once again CN does not fail to disappoint in this regard in the material it submits to the Court.

The following documentary evidence supports the hearing of the motion. 

CN DIRECTOR "WITH KNOWLEDGE OF THE MATTERS"

In an October 11 email, full of mistakes and misperceptions (original image in this post), the director (per LinkedIn, above) laid out the reasons to initiate the speed reductions including the first known use of the 'I found out today' phrase, as well as the GBO language to be issued to VIA trains.

To back up his and CN's actions, the following points appear in Hoang Tran's affidavit (in "quotations" where required for clarity):

CN and VIA operate under the TSA effective January 1, 2009 for a ten-year term, currently under adjudication before the Canadian Transportation Agency. Pending resolution, CN and VIA agreed to extend the terms of the 2009 TSA in a Status Quo Agreement dated June 20, 2023.

"CN issues approximately 180 GBO's daily, approximately 65,000 annually in Canada." If CN followed the process in Section 20 of the Railway Safety Act, CN operations would grind to a halt. To my knowledge, no GBO, timetable, General Operating Instruction, Operating Bulletin or other form of special instruction made by CN has ever been judicially reviewed. "VIA trains have collectively been subject to hundreds of thousand, if not millions, or tens of millions" of pages of CN GBO's since the TSA came into effect in 2009.

"I am not an engineer and do not purport to provide a detailed technical description of shunt or LOS at a high level." On November 15, 2024 the LOS Committee published its LOS White Paper. CN's former Manager of Signals, Michael Burgett, was Project Manager for the LOS Committee. VIA representatives have been "on the LOS Committee email distribution list since 2021." The White Paper recommends On-Board Shunt Enhancers. 

VIA has announced that by 2026, Venture trains will be the only VIA train in the Corridor, which is largely CN-owned infrastructure. 

(This date, just one year away, makes it clear that whatever solution CN eventually foresees for VIA's Venture-equipped trains on its trackage will necessarily be a long-term solution encompassing all of VIA's then Corridor fleet.)

VIA-CN INTERACTIONS: A TIMELINE

On August 20, 2021 CN shared its testing and findings about LOS in Illinois DOT Venture cars. CN performed simulation testing of Ventures (10 formats in B&W below left - click to enlarge image) based on VIA's recommendations.


As a result of simulation testing, CN's S&C team were concerned about LOS for trains less than 24 axles. Only two-locomotive configurations, in the green-shaded cells, were thought to adequately shunt. (10 formats in colour above right - click to enlarge image.) The rightmost column 'notes' provides CN's conclusions required to mitigate shunt issues. 

Throughout August and September, 2021 VIA asked whether CN approved operation of Ventures on its tracks. (CN Advised that Michael Burgett would have final approval.)

August 19, 2021 email from VIA's Robert Becker to CN's Manager, Senior Mechanical Car Reliability and Director, Mechanical Reliability: Our winter test train is scheduled to arrive at Montreal at the end of September, so we are anxious to have your confirmation that there are no issues.

August 26, 2021 email from CN's Martin Nolan to VIA and CN contacts including CN's Manager, Passenger Operations: We do not see any issues with these cars on our lines as long as the operating rules are followed.

August 30, 2021 email from Robert Becker to CN contacts: You mention from a reliability standpoint you have no issues. Are you still reviewing other standpoints, or does this complete your review?

August 30, 2021 Martin Nolan to VIA contacts: Our review is complete.

August 31, 2021 CN Manager, Passenger Operations to VIA: "Michael Burgett for shunting would be the only final approval needed." CN was still performing simulations into early-October, 2021.

Oct. 15, 2021 email from Michael Burgett to VIA:
March 21, 2024 email from Michael Burgett re: DRMV crossings Mar 21/24 to Jacques Luce, CN Manager of Passenger Operations:
March 22, 2024 CN issues GBO's for seven Drummondville Sub. [DRMV] crossings, and a further six crossings on March 28, 2024. 

March 25, 2024 VIA asked that the DRMV GBO's not apply to the Ocean due to its greater axle count, and the language was changed. "I am not aware of VIA ever raising an issue, with the process undertaken by CN leading to issuance of the GBO's. When CN identifies a safety concern with one or more crossings, it implements a GBO to ensure a safe crossing."

"In March, 2024, VIA consulted with CN about applications to the Minister of Transport relating to speed restrictions for the Venture trains, unrelated to LOS issues." On May 21, 2024 CN advised it had no objection to CN's application to the Minister.

VIA VENTURES WEST OF TORONTO - JUNE, 2O24

In May, 2024 per the TSA, VIA sought CN's approval to deploy Venture 'special trains' in the Corridor in June, specifically west of Toronto. Such a request would also be made in September, 2024. 

May 17, 2024 email from Jason Letellier, VIA Network Planning and Scheduling Manager to CN's Jacques Luce, CN Manager of Passenger Operations cc: Hoang Tran, subject line "NEW FLEET TEST RUN TMC-SARN MAY 22, 2024". Request to operate Venture special deadhead train west of Toronto. Proposed schedule May 22 TMC-Sarnia outside peak hours. We would like to park equipment on the Point Edward Spur or in CN's Sarnia yard, move to the station pocket track to do real-estate/plug-in training/tests.

May 17, 2024 email from CN to VIA: We are reviewing if there is space in the yard. In the meantime, if VIA wants to operate the special train on Guelph Sub, please confirm VIA will pay full Corridor rates.

CN issued GBO's applying to a list of 75 GCP-4000 technology crossings on the Chatham and Dundas Subdivisions, to address potential LOS for the June 26-27 special train. Unusually, VIA No 63 was Venture-equipped with Set 11, thence departing Thursday as a media availability for "VIA's New Fleet Arriving in SW Ontario at London and Windsor". The special train operated Mimico–London (deadhead following VIA 79), London–Windsor (inauguration), then Windsor–Mimico (deadhead following VIA 78), with time slots pre-approved by Metrolinx and CN. VIA's CEO, MP's and mayors rode Set 11 at London and Windsor (as train 671 westward and 678 eastward). VIA did not even publicize the 'inauguration' event on its own website. 

VIA VENTURES WEST OF TORONTO - SEPTEMBER, 2O24

On September 3rd, 2024, VIA ran a Venture special train between Toronto and Sarnia. Two HEP cars were added to this train to meet the 32-axle minimum requirement and avoid restrictions on crossings. To CN’s knowledge, [this, and the June 26-27, 2024 SWO Inauguration] the only time [sic] that VIA had requested and received CN’s concurrence to operate Venture equipment outside the QMO Corridor." 

Venture Set 12 made the trip to Windsor trailing Burton Manor and coach 8101, as VIA No 331. Experiencing mechanical trouble by London, Windsor was eventually reached. Due to the two trailing HEP cars, the bidirectional Venture consist had to be wyed. The crew booked rest and departure east was planned for 0200 overnight as VIA No 334, although the return trip took six hours!

The one-and-only set of photos I've seen of the above-mentioned consist (two above and top photo - kindly shared by Rob McClintock) snapped stopped at Sarnia, preparing to run around the HEP cars to return to Toronto.  Since the cab car was blocked, the Venture set was wyed to get its locomotive facing east, prior to taking the VIA siding beside the station. Some suggested at the time that the extra cars were to assess the pulling power of the Charger locomotive!

For that September 3 special train, rather than wait for a GBO to permit it to operate with 24 axles without restrictions, VIA confirmed it would proceed with a 32-axle train. The operation of this special train was the subject of a flurry of testy emails between CN and VIA, involving scheduling, track availability due to work blocks and even getting VIA to pay while VIA contested what it was being asked to pay!

August 2, 2024 email from Jason Letellier (VIA) to Jacques Luce (CN), one of many below between these two, cc: Hoang Tran. We have adjusted date for test...

August 2, 2024 email from VIA to CN. "As communicated by VIA to CN in numerous emails since 2019 regarding the Guelph Sub, VIA would not pay to CN the Corridor rate until the infrastructure is brought back to the state it was ewhen its operation was conveyed to GEXR. If CN invoices VIA for the special train based on the Corridor rates, VIA will deduct from the applicable invoices an amount reflecting its position that it should not have to pay the Corridor rate.

August 6, 2024 email from CN to VIA. "Unfortunately at this time we will not allow any special or test trains over the Guelph Sub until all matters are rectified." 

August 26, 2024 email VIA to CN cc: Hoang Tran "NEW FLEET TEST RUN TMC-SARN". A revised request to operate our Venture to Sarnia. "We want to take advantage of our equipment availability window for training in Sarnia even if the train does not operate through Kitchener. We require to provide training for accessibility and for equipment maintenance staff. The same-day round-trip is planned with the previous time slots leaving MMC and between London and Sarnia. Thank you for providing CN's approval."

Further emails re: Strathroy work block. Proposed date and times would not work. Evening departure conflicts. VIA offered to adjust later, meeting 87 after 87 arrives. Deadhead movement without customers. 

CN to VIA: There is too much congestion. You need to stay away from westbound times.

VIA to CN: "OK if I send the train to Sarnia for us to do our training and accessibility exercise, we can J both trains together for next morning's departures (VIA84). While 84 operates to Toronto the next morning we split at London and have the special do LNDN-TMC as to prevent switching at UNION."

CN to VIA: Send me a schedule of what you're proposing. I need VIA off the Strathroy during these work blocks. We are working around 87 schedule so nothing before. VIA proposed September 4 Mimico 0830-Sarnia 1135; Sarnia 0840-London 0952; London 1005-1219, 35 minutes ahead of VIA 72.

CN to VIA - Can you do it on the 3rd?
VIA to CN - We can make it work for the 3rd.

August 30 CN to VIA: "Due to short notice we are unable to get the final approval and create the necessary GBO's for: 
PASSENGER TRAINS OPERATING WITH LESS THAN 32 AXLES MUST PROVIE PROTECTION IN ACCORDANCE WITH RULE 103.1(F) AT PUBLIC CROSSINGS AT MILE XXX (SUB). 
Please work on a date the following week and advise."

August 30 VIA to CN: "We are inquiring to operate with a 32 axle train. Will confirm shortly to ensure we operate without CN having to put together the GBO's for this train. Will maintain Sept 3rd for the moment."

Aug 30 CN to VIA "Once you confirm the 32 axles will be met, CN will allow VIA to proceed unrestricted."
Aug 30 VIA to CN: We will be adding 2 HEP cars to the Venture train to meet the 32 axle specification.

VIA'S EXPERT COGNITIVE WORKLOAD ANALYSIS

VIA contends that forcing the manual protection of 304 grade crossings creates very real risks to the safety of passengers, employees and the public due to the additional cognitive workload placed on locomotive engineers. To substantiate this contention and measure its impact on VIA's Corridor locomotive engineers both qualitatively and quantitatively, VIA engaged the services of an industry expert in Human Factor Analysis.

On December 13, 2024 a report entitled 'Cognitive Workload Analysis (CWA) of Locomotive Engineer 'Approach to Crossing' Task Using Legacy vs. Venture Locomotives, prepared by Dr. Christina Rudin-Brown, Ph.D., CCPE of Human Factors North, Inc., Toronto was submitted to VIA's Director, Railway Initiatives, Safety & Railway Operations. Dr. Rudin-Brown, was previously Manager and Senior Human Factors Investigator at Canada's Transportation Safety Board. The report was obtained December 15, 2024 therefore had to amend VIA's Interim Stay Motion Record December 12, 2024, submitted December 18, 2024.

For the analysis, ten VIA Locomotive Engineers (LE) with at least five years' experience, and at least one year's experience with Ventures. Each participant completed a survey, with the 'approach to crossing' tasks presented in flowchart format:
  
LE's mentioned some of their concerns with the rigours of the Venture speed reductions:
  • It was more difficult to see operating warning lights in daytime. 
  • Passengers express frustration with being late, adding to LC temporal demand. 
  • LE's also feel frustration, whether to slow/stop/or not. 
  • Visually searching for upcoming crossing protection activation was particularly onerous. 
  • The need to start preparing for slowing down for crossings occurs up to two miles beforehand. 
  • At night, LE's can see lights operating before the 1/4-mile whistle post but still have to slow and maintain 45 mph. 
  • Increased workload diverts LE cognitive resources, potentially leading to making mistakes. 
  • LE's questioned the necessity of speed reductions under Rule 103.1(f). 
  • Monitoring by management of their compliance to reductions led to us-versus-them adversarial culture. 
  • Negative impact on job satisfaction and psychological health. 
  • Increased workload leads to impaired performance and thereby increased risk. 

[Here's the take-home message:]
The workload analysis showed a Workload Rating of 10-15 for Legacy, 
with a three-times higher Workload Rating of 30-40 for Venture. 


The report concludes with some suggestions accompanying the analysis:
  • Adoption of equipment changes to improve shunting of Ventures.
  • Implementation of LE decision aids.
  • An automated means to display in-cab whether crossing protection is active. 
If more facts are forthcoming, I'll post them in a subsequent post. **UPDATE @ PUBLICATION TIME, VIA is permitted to challenge the two Crossing Supplements in the context of its Application for Judicial Review - to be held February 25 in Montreal! Further updates in this post.

As we near the four-month mark of this saga of CN-imposed crossing speed reductions, I'm sure the following people are looking forward to resolution: me, VIA employees and management, and most of all VIA passengers who are being massively inconvenienced, delayed and played by CN though they are not being told that. (On second thought, I am looking forward to resolution but will miss the digging to find out the real story. ) Or, as someone in the industry put it to me:


Running extra...


Canadian Railway Modeller (CRM) magazine founder and publisher Morgan Turney has died. CRM Associate Editor John Longhurst published an excellent tribute post on his blog. Here I am posting this on the internet, and here's what resides on the CRM webpage about the internet: "It was with bitter disappointment that we announced that Railfan Canada magazine had to be discontinued due to the proliferation of the Internet and everything that is now 'free'. Social media and all things associated with it is quickly forcing print media to struggle to survive."

Perhaps CRM deserves its own Trackside Treasure post. In 2017, I included CRM while listing 150 Great Things About Canadian Railways, under these general headings: places, people, nicknames, books and authors, logos and developments, locomotives and freight cars, passenger cars and named trains, railway names, preservation and model railways. I built a model of the Tucker MPE elevator, complete with the rooftop piping and extended drive shed. The article appeared in the August-September 1995 issue of Canadian Railway Modeller magazine. 

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

VIA Ventures in Service, Part 3

Back in January, 2024 and with the delivery of the twelfth Siemens Venture set, I split my original Siemens Venture post first published on September 21, 2021. That now seems like an awfully long time ago! We're now splitting it again! VIA's Siemens implementation has so far spawned twelve Trackside Treasure posts and counting! They are:
VIA has been dealing with reduced serviceability of the Ventures, as well as some train cancellations in December and now more in February. A new corridor rotation diagram is expected soon. This post picks up the implementation in February, 2025. 

FEBRUARY 2025 UPDATES

February 1: Venture-equipped VIA Nos 24, 29, 633 bustituted due to 'mechanical issues'; No 624 replaced by LRC consist. February 2's No 54 and February 3's No 645 pre-cancelled, both due to 'operational constraints'. Perhaps leading up to the planned rotation change on February 4? 

February 3: All London-Toronto trains are all LRC or HEP. The only Venture-equipped train in SW Ontario today is No 84, likely the last one we'll see. A dramatic increase in Venture-equipped trains starting this Monday, from eight up to 15 here. J-trains 60/50 with Set 6/901-4 LRC and 62/52  with Sets 15/18L (*new Montreal-Toronto Venture-equipped trains)(trains cancelled Feb 7-Mar 2):
  • Monday: 40, 41, 42, 44, 46, 47, 52, 55, 59, 60*, 61*, 62*, 69*, 641, 669*. 
  • Tuesday: 40, 41, 42, 44, 50, 52, 55, 59, 60, 61, 62, 69, 641, 644, 669. (62/52 split! dep 83 minutes late due to mechanical difficulties on No 52).
  • Wednesday: 40, 42, 44, 47, 50, 52, 55, 59, 60, 62, 69, 641, 643, 645, 669.
  • Thursday: 40, 42, 47, 48, 50, 52, 55, 59, 60, 62, 68, 69, 643, 669.
  • Friday: 42, 44, 47, 50, 52, 55, 59, 60, 61, 62, 69, 643, 645, 669.
  • Saturday: 42, 50, 53, 54, 59, 60, 62, 69, 643, 644, 645.
  • Sunday: 42, 45, 52, 53, 55, 59, 62, 69, 646, 669.
February 4: The first day of fully double J-trained Ventures. I call them 'doublavays' - a nod to the French letter 'W' because We all Win with J-trained Ventures. Double V's! VIA No 62/52 with Sets 6/17; VIA No 60/50 with Sets 15/12 (below at Mi 179.6 Kingston Sub):
February 6: VIA says they are temporarily suspending several trains on the Ottawa-Toronto route due to operational challenges, and that they need to upgrade and exchange all the old cars for the new fleet, so there are less train cars available to operate. Formally put to running trades: VIA has announced temporary cancellation of certain trains to allow for a strategic redeployment of fleet resources allowing for operational improvements: Nos 42/55 daily (effective February 10); No 644 on Fridays and Sundays, and 645 Mondays (effective February 7), through to March 2.

IMPORTANT UPDATE: TRAIN CANCELLATIONS IN THE CORRIDOR OTTAWA-TORONTO ROUTE from VIA's Director of Railway Transportation and Operating Practices: 
As part of our ongoing efforts to ensure the long-term reliability and efficiency of VIA Rail's services, we are temporarily suspending several trains on the Ottawa-Toronto route due to operational challenges. These cancellations are necessary to ensure we have sufficient backup available as we transition from our Legacy fleet to the new Venture trains in the Quebec City-Windsor corridor. This allows us to maintain seamless travel and ensure the reliability of our service while some Legacy trains are retired or undergo necessary repairs.

These frequencies were selected based on lower passenger demand to minimize disruption. If passengers ask about these cancellations, reassure them that these cancellations are necessary to ensure availability of spare equipment as VIA Rail's legacy trains reach the end of their lifespan and new trains arrive. 

February 8: I was at Kingston's VIA station to photograph two 'doublavay' J-trained Ventures. VIA No 60/50:
and VIA No 62/52. With this rotation change, mornings at the epicentre of the Venture world, Ottawa station, now include only one Venture when there used to be as many as four!
While at the station that day, I produced the accompanying rudimentary graphic. The data I've been collecting on Venture sets in revenue Corridor service (SW Ontario to Quebec City inclusive) shows that only nine of the 23 sets in use as of February 8, have been in continuous service. I've allowed up two-week intervals for which I've garnered no observations anywhere in the Corridor, allowing that two weeks perhaps for routine service, or just missed by trackside observers. Some have suggested that six sets have waited for windshield replacements/parts.

The following sets have had at least one three-week interval with no observations from November 18-February 8, with some not observed for six, seven or even ten weeks (denoted by RED cells): 1,2,3,4,5,6,9,12,13,14,15,16,20,21. Sets 1 and 3 were not operated at all during that period.
This is as close as I've been able to come to document the unavailability of Venture sets for revenue service throughout the Corridor, since the last Corridor rotation diagram I've seen.  Anecdotal reports received from various sources including on-board staff members telling interested passengers that there were five Venture sets awaiting wheel truing in Montreal, but that the wheel machine was unserviceable and that VIA would not be able to have it fixed quickly. There were seven Venture sets at TMC. One employee mentioned that there were only 11 Venture sets in service at one point. Windshields have cracked on a number of Ventures necessitating wyeing before returning to Montreal. It is a safety issue because of the heating elements for defrosters, and trains can’t lead with a cracked windshield.  Usually a hairline crack in a corner, the windshields are cracking due to the temperature differential from being inside and then moving outside.

With the three Corridor cancellations implemented February 7-10, the Corridor rotation diagram now comprises 12 Venture sets (down from 13 implemented Nov. 4), 12 LRC sets and 3 HEP sets. This seems like a serious regression in the implementation. Diagram kindly shared by Doug Bardeau:
February 11: Set 24 was at Ottawa station, though perhaps not in revenue service.
February 14: VIA No 62/52's second Venture set was locomotive east-facing - unusual!
February 14: Set 24 was at Ottawa station again. Likely burn-in runs.

February 15-16: Major snowstorm hampers operations east of Montreal. February 16's No 69 j’d with 669; February 17's doublavays were split: 60/50 departed 140+ minutes late; No 62/52 departed 130+ minutes late; Set 19 as No 641 j'd with No 643. As of 1425 the list of cancelled Corridor trains for today: 20, 26 (Ottawa-Montréal portion), 33 (Québec-Montréal portion), 37, 44, 53, 66, 67, 68, 69, 83, 87, 668, 669. Reportedly, snowplow contractor for MMC was busy elsewhere, no trains could leave.

February 18: P42-led trains at Ottawa: 4. Venture-equipped trains: Zero.
February 19: Cancelled Corridor Trains (*planned as Ventures): 40*, 44*, 50*, 52*, 60*, 62*, 63, 68, 69*, 641*, 643*, 669*. No 61 temporary equipment swap from LRC to 'doublavay' wyed before Montreal departure to have Set 24 leading bad-order Set 14! One of Set 24's first revenue trips over the CN Kingston Sub.

 

Friday, February 7, 2025

Algoma Central Gons rehomed


I recently impetuously indicated interest in importing two of several Algoma Central (AC) gondolas being offered by Nick Acciavatti. Nick's story is an interesting one. He's relocating, not only changing houses but also modelled locales, switching from AC in Northern Ontario to CP on Vancouver Island. So he'll be keeping CP stuff, but not AC stuff. I've also seen some AC Geeps after their rehoming on others' layouts. It's a win-win! Here are the two gons I selected, now at home on my Hanley Spur layout:
I've previously blogged about the prototype fleet of AC gons. I caught up with one at Kingston's Counter Street team track, albeit after absorption into CN's rolling stock fleet with the sale of Wisconsin Central - some renumbering involved - published as the travels of WC 201178.
The only buyer's remorse I had after initiating the transaction with Nick was whether these long gons would traverse a sharp curve on my CN (and CP interchange) trackage near my Davis Tannery. (It turns out they traverse the trackage just fine). These first four photos show the cars posed at the interchange, at which CN is in the foreground and CP in the background.
Tagged by 'Nick' smiley face!
I also posed them at Presland Iron & Steel, where they'll likely be posed porting steel loads.
Here's my only former AC rolling stock. A Lima 50-foot gondola that I'd decalled decades ago with C-D-S Lettering dry transfers:
A comparison of the old and new. The problem with leaving scrap glued into corners of the gons to replicate the prototype means sometimes drop-in loads don't sit flat! 
I liked the extended ends of the Walthers cars, but decided I needed them higher. I added two pieces of Plastruct square styrene, then wood-scribed thin styrene on the inside of the ends. I also added just over two rungs of end ladders. Will I add end reporting marks? I did add ACI labels, chalk marks, and X2F couplers. The cars came with metal wheel sets.
I needed drop-in loads for my two newest cars. A quick trip to the balsa box! I white-glued two base thicknesses, adding a third for a sheet steel load, and a few single strips for structural steel load. I've since found some wooden I-beams to add to the top layer in future. I wanted to add strip wood to replicate the prototype spacers along the interior of the car sides, but found that scale lumber didn't have enough room to fit inside the gon. So, I replaced it with tan-coloured cardstock. The only visible portions of the spacers are the tops, above the sides of the guns.
Walthers webpage listing:

 Lots o' links:


Also recently re-homed was a second Rapido Trains Inc. CN RS-18, NIB. CN 3830 is in the green/yellow scheme. It's already been broken-in and is now switching CN customers on the Hanley Spur! This, and the redevelopment of my CP station yard will likely result in the backdating of my modelled era from 'circa 1970' to pre-1966, when that yard was remade into Confederation Park.

Running extra... 

A Moncton developer and former owner of a rail equipment company owes the province of New Brunswick almost $5 million as a result of a failed effort to refurbish rolling stock for VIA Rail Canada. Developer Richard Carpenter has “no discernible defence” against paying a $3 million personal guarantee Carpenter made to the province in 2008 for a $12.5 million loan guarantee to his company Industrial Rail Services Inc. IRSI held contracts with VIA to refurbish Bombardier LRC passenger cars, retrofit British-built Renaissance cars to meet accessibility requirements, and rehabilitate six RDCs. Ouch.

Tuesday this week marked the first day of a new VIA Corridor equipment rotation, featuring two J-trained Venture sets on VIA trains 60/50 and 62/52. (Video capture of No 60/50 through a winter wonderland scene at the Mi 179.6 with Venture Sets 15/12 - below). This new rotation repositions Venture sets that were operating west of Toronto, and makes two (four) trains per day east out of Toronto that are not subject to crossing speed reductions imposed by CN. Interestingly, on Wednesday and Friday, No 50 was NOT a Venture!
A huge social media flap erupted this week when the politically-incorrect hosts of A Modeler's Life podcast assessed the current social media director of the National Model Railroad Association. Was Lionel Strang 'the ugly American' on the panel? (he may actually be 'an ugly Canadian'). He has been needlessly vocal in the past. I don't listen to or watch podcasts (watching a podcast, isn't that watching a video?) but social media commenters are swimming away from the sinking ship that is AML. Rapido was roundly applauded:

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Burnside Manitoba Pool Elevator

The Manitoba Pool Elevators (MPE) $1.6 million grain elevator at Burnside, MB was one of the last wooden grain elevators built, opening on July 24, 1984. Surprisingly, its lifespan was a short 25 years. Continuous-pour elevators were already on the horizon, literally, at Tucker and later at Rosser on CP's Carberry Sub east of Portage. Located seven miles west of Portage la Prairie on CP's Carberry Subdivision, just off the Trans-Canada Highway, the Burnside shipping point was intended to replace Portage's 'A' elevator which was lost to fire in 1982. I was able to visit the elevator twice - once in 1984 (top photo and below) during construction and again in 1986 (all other photos below).
At 80 feet high, the double-composite design comprised 47 bins with a 5,680 tonne, 208,000-bushel capacity. Twenty tons of nails hammered into 750,000 board-feet of lumber. The acccess road featured a former CP tank car body in use as a culvert! The elevator track had room for 30 covered hoppers.

Built by Manitoba Pool Elevators between August 1983 and July 1984, and opened officially on 24 July 1984. It was later closed and demolished in 2008. Fern Legault, a friend of my aunt and uncle, was manager until 1989. Based on that connection, I drove out to the new elevator during my four days in Portage on June 5, 1986 for a visit. I was allowed to wander around, camera-in-hand.
The amount of lumber that goes into an elevator is just plain staggering.
The unloading shed (above) and signage (below):
Ubiquitous tools at the car-loading doors, including two car-movers:
No 1 and No 2 Legs. Hand lettered on both: MAKE SURE TO CHECK SWING FLOW.

Stencilling - GARNER GATE, HOPPER GATE:
An aerial view from the 1993 MPE calendar:
Under-construction photo from the Portage Daily Graphic dated March 9, 1984. Hoping it was warmer up there than it looks:
Two more Portage Daily Graphic photos - Grand opening July 26, 1984:
Not warm nor fuzzy: trackside view January 8, 1987:
There's more on Burnside in this earlier post CP Carberry Sub west of Portage.

Lots o' links:
Running extra...

If I'd had access to any of the following at this YouTuber's age: video camera, camera, internet, Youtube, any technology above a notepad and a pencil, I probably would have done this:
There are a lot of young, enthusiastic railfans out there. I used to write down with my pencil and paper: 'LOCOHO, LOCOWA OR CBWA' to indicate honk from the locomotive, waves from locomotive and caboose. That was a big deal at the time. As we age, we may look at this and think it's a bit much. I think that says more about 'us' than it does about 'them'.

In many pursuits, I tend to place a high value on enthusiasm. I place a low value on stodginess and know-it-allness. Sometimes enthusiasm is viewed as a virtue of someone less serious instead of a virtue of someone who is just more fervent. In this, my third post on my 1986 visit to Portage, I had already been visiting there for ten years, and my enthusiasm was still at a high level.

Friday, January 24, 2025

One More Day at Portage, 1986

From May 21 to June 7, 1986 I travelled aboard VIA Rail from Kingston to Vancouver return. My trip east is profiled in this post. My goal had been Expo86, the World Exposition in Vancouver, and its SteamExpo. My first two days in Portage are profiled in this first post of this two-post series. 

I had the use of my Aunt Rosemary and Uncle Wilf's car, so mid-morning on June 5 I drove to Burnside, where agent Fernand Legault, one of their dental patients, showed me the new Manitoba Pool elevator. I was down at the station from 0830-1040, caught two CP trains at Burnside, then spent the afternoon back at the station. 

Between switching moves, CP 6014-5776-3120 pause at the Portage station with its manifest train and van CP 434142, as the head-end trainman returns to the head-end at 0850 on June 5 (top photo and below):
Pulled by CP 5615-552x, a short 47-car eastbound with van CP 434620 passes grain cars at 0928:
VIA 6512-6621 bring train No 2 into Portage behind the UGG elevator at 8th St N.W at 0945. The train’s two engines can manage the 8-car consist, but help is on the way. New VIA F40PH-2D’s will arrive beginning in December, 1986. 
On the wide-open, west-of-Portage prairie, I’m visiting MPE’s new elevator at Burnside. There's more about my visit in this post on this then-new, now-gone grain elevator. 
Three CP freights went past, maybe more while I was inside! CP 5989-5924-5407 led this eastbound intermodal at 1042. CP 5407 was originally Quebec, North Shore & Labrador 211. Caboose 434712:

New CP 3121-3122 lead 5529 plus ballast and grain empties wend their way west at 1125. Cylindricals forever! Or so it seems as these iconic grain-handlers seem to head to the horizon on CP at Burnside (below).
Back in Portage, CP 6010 crosses 3rd St N.E. with its solo serving-up of 110 grain empties at 1145:
CPWX 601073’s were the reporting marks chosen for Model Power’s  HO-scale cylindrical (too short, friction-bearing, under-detailed but it’s all we had until Intermountain and other model manufacturers cottoned on to the Canadian market).
Unphotographed:
1320 W CN 5244-5032 79718.
1320 E CN 5314-5185-5036 bathtub gondolas 79392.
1400 W CN 9511-5273 36 ballast cars 79860.
It was very difficult to find a CN SD40 not wearing stripes by this time. CN 5195 with two-shy-of-a-hundred grain empties westbound at the CN station at 1420:
CP stabs CN! CP 5780-5917-6020-6013 hammer the West Tower diamonds with 109 eastbound coal loads behind them at 1435.
CN 5141-5221 wait to go west on the Rivers Sub as coal loads continue to continually clank over the CN.
Minnedosa messenger! CP 6034 toots its own horn, making its eastbound arrival apparent at 8th St N.W. Its grain loads ahead of Angus van 434626 pass the Coke can loads at the UGG elevator at 1450:
CN 5141 and 5221 are now free to go west with 95 grain empties and caboose 79201, after pawing patiently for the CP coal loads to conclude at 1453.
Westbound CP 5782-3064 drag potash empties past the Engro spur, with its own fertilizer load spotted at the fertilizer shed at 1600:
CN stabs CP! CN 9499’s manifest has the light at West Tower, as CP 5782’s train waits at 8th St N.W. at 1610:
After a home-cooked steak supper, my aunt and I drove the yards in the evening, catching more CP and CN freights. 
2031 E CN 5175-4314-1051 grain loads 79213
2130 E CN 5229-5226 79657

Aunt Rosemary and I were at the Portage station at 0830 on June 6, though my train didn’t arrive until 1015. Wilf arrived just before train time. I was in seat 30 of ex-CP coach 110, where I enjoyed their care package lunch at Winnipeg. I arrived in Toronto on June 7.

Running extra...
It's been a week. IYKYK:


Nora O'Donnell's changing role at CBS includes a relaunch of the CBS Evening News this coming Monday, with co-anchors Maurice duBois and John Dickerson and state-of-the-art technology 'walls'. A through-line to the greats: Walter Cronkite, Dan Rather, forgettable Harry Smith/Jeff Glor and the sterling Nora.