Thursday, January 16, 2025

Two Days at Portage, 1986

From May 21 to June 7, 1986 I travelled aboard VIA Rail from Kingston to Vancouver return. My trip west is profiled in this post. My destination was Expo86, the World Exposition in Vancouver, and its SteamExpo. I spent six days in Vancouver before heading east aboard VIA No 4 to Portage la Prairie, MB where I spent four days with my Aunt Rosemary and Uncle Wilf. In this post, I'll profile my prolific Portage passages preserved for posterity on June 3 and 4, with June 5's trains in part two of this two-post series (LINK to follow). 

I'm missing some of my original notes for these first two days of Portage train watching, June 3 and 4, so bear with me. I had major life changes on my mind during this trip, about to start a full-time job, propose marriage to the medical stenographer who worked across the hall, and marry her a year later! My usual fastidious note-taking fell by the wayside!

Aunt Rosemary met me at the station on June 3 at 0910, and we met Wilf at the office before heading to their house to drop off my duffle bag (and poster tube of VIA posters from their station display at Expo86). Then it was off to our usual lunch rendezvous, the Co-Op Restaurant adjacent to CP's Carberry Sub for lunch. In the evening, after a turkey supper, we drove around to see Tucker, Oakland, Burnside and MacGregor elevators. I also caught seven CN and CP freights around Portage in the afternoon. I found this interesting westbound crossing 3rd St N.E. CN 5519-4243-4xxx-4xxx are in charge, with a cut of military equipment, likely heading for CFB Shilo, behind the power:
M109 self-propelled and M101 towed artillery

M113 armoured personnel carriers 
M548 tracked cargo (ammunition) carriers and an M578 recovery vehicle (below)
CN 5082 and a mate bring potash empties down the yard lead heading west:

This eastbound grain train is pulled by CP 6041-5965. Fewer elevators still standing in Portage meant less road and rail activity, but improved sightlines! Just managed a photo of this GRAD '85 GLADSTONE graffiti:
An interesting-looking two-unit manifest churns westward behind CP 3082-5012:
A going-away zoom shot of CP 3082-5012. With scads of SD40-2’s, CP still had a little bit of locomotive latitude left! 
At East Tower, CN 9546 brings this manifest west under a sunlit sky. A John Deere pull-type combine is near the head-end, likely for setout at a still-to-be-reached town. 
Lumber empties are led west by CN 9627-5135. The switch in foreground leads to the spur along Fisher Avenue. On the spur, the large number of covered hoppers could not possibly be accommodated by the UGG elevator. Perhaps an over-supply of stored cars, or spotted for producer-loading. 
On June 4, I was back at the station from 1015-1200 before we headed into Winnipeg to visit CN's Symington Yard followed by a supper at Don Cherry's Grapes restaurant. Plowing west past the CP station, 6000-5559 have a boxy stowaway behind the power! 
Robot 32, a.k.a. CPHX 1032 was built in 1977 and owned by Ontario Hydro. Typically used in the mountains, not the Prairies, this unit was originally CP boxcar 204200 and contains Locotrol equipment used to control mid-train helper units. 
Switching near the CN station, striped 5226-5229 have a Paciļ¬c Fruit Express mechanical refrigerator car in tow. 
The chase is on! CN 5009-5017 head for the U.S. border with lumber and other resource products in this pacing shot south of Winnipeg on CN’s Sprague Sub. 
Ahead by a nose! At a crossing near the distinctively boxy Mile 142.4 Manitoba Pool Elevators installation along the Trans-Canada Highway, we got ahead of 5009’s train. 
Ex-CN hogger Mark Perry says this photo was taken at Deacon's Corner - where Manitoba Road 207 intersects the Trans-Canada Highway; out of Symington Yard we'd just visited - beyond the Red River Floodway. I think my uncle was driving pretty fast to get us ahead of the train and on the sunny side! The elevator and elevator track are long-gone, now a self-storage location:
The snail-like synchronicity of posting photos taken trackside 38 years ago continues. Hey, better late than never. In the fullness of time, I plan to finally feature all my Portage photos. It's part of the balance of then and now, passenger and freight, CN and CP, pop-up and for-posterity posts here on Trackside Treasure. Thanks for being along for the ride!

Running extra...

Watching the US Cabinet nomination hearings in front of the Senate has been an exercise in watching UNderwhelmingly UNderqualified candidates in front of UNimpressed Democratic senators and UNinquisitive Republican senators. Is this the UN or the US? The SecDef candidate has never managed more than 200 people and is set to take on a workforce of 3 million. Oorah! (Perhaps indicative of the Unimpressive nature of this process, when I typed Oorah, the spellcheck feature changed it to Oprah!)
I'm tempted to change Trackside Treasure to a current world affairs blog. With new governments in the US and Canada, a potential mid-East peace deal, worldwide political intrigue, and enough conflict and strife to fill several conference rooms at the UN, I tried out an online blog name generator for some blog name ideas. Here's the portmanteaux the AI gave me: WorldLens, GeoPulse, EcoSphere and WorldReflections. I'm going to go my own way and call it The World is Going to Peaces.
Here are two book-end viral moments to encapsulate the now-ending Trudeau-Biden era. 
Oh wait, wrong Trudeau.

Thursday, January 9, 2025

Coffee with Lance Mindheim

 

As I leap out of bed (OK, slothfully) every morning, I try to be everything. Positive self-talk: Today I'm going to be an author, a railfan, a blogger, a photographer, a model railroad builder, a model railroad operator. Only one qualification is not on my checklist: I'm not a fully-formed layout designer. My idea of layout design is several drawings and laying down track as I go.

Who are the great layout designers? Those who are not only thought-leaders but who have successfully built layouts and 'walk the talk'? The late John Armstrong, Byron Henderson and Lance Mindheim in the United States come to mind. In Canada, it's tough to name as many. There are several great modellers and model railway clubs who have designed room-filling layouts: Jason Baxter, Jason Shron, Railview, HOMES, Waterloo and concentrations of great layouts in Ottawa and other cities. Blog partner Chris Mears has done great work in collaboration with James Hilton in the UK. 

It was 1994 when Lance began this pioneering layout. An eye-level N scale representation of the Monon in a bedroom, later in a house and featured in Model Railroader magazine in 2001. The top photo is the one that launched a thousand layouts, the concept of 'negative space' and Lance's layout design business. This post contains wisdom from Lance's last several months of blogging.                                                        

Before Christmas, I had the opportunity to get hooked on Lance's blog posts. I was reading some writing I wanted to remember, digest and share. Here are the ones that rang true to me. A good read while we ring in 2025 (<--SNL 50*)! (As with most things I post here, I enjoy them, and if others, even one person, get something out of them, that's gravy!) 

I did not actually sit down with Lance and a cup of coffee. I may have had a cup of coffee while I was reading Lance's comments. They appear lightly-edited below as answers to hypothetical questions and linked to the posts they originally appeared in. As a result, I don't know what Lance takes in his coffee. Based on his modelling philosophy, it will not be black. It will probably exhibit a shortened colour palette, probably adding in some milk to make it a dull, washed-out brown? 

This post is a buffet-restaurant of model railway thought. I've given you a dollop of several dishes. Consider it your first trip after you've been seated and ordered your beverages and the server suggestively says, "OK, now you can go to the buffet!". The links provide you with that second, third, fourth trip back to the buffet once you've found something suited to your taste. I recommend all the linked posts. All you need to do is get up and get a fresh plate each time!

MODELLING THE PROTOTYPE

Layout room - feeling of fun or feeling of dread?
I’ve come to the point where my overarching goal is that when I walk into my layout room I want to feel like I’m in a place that elicits positive thoughts. Miami, LA, Brooklyn, Baltimore? So many positive memories and hopefully more to come. Next in line as for what the layout’s “job” is? I enjoy the building process. My ratio of build vs. ops time is probably 50:1.

Bright sunshine layout or more realism required?
You want to go to a place that actually exists, existed at one time, or very well “could” have been. The starting point is careful study and examination. What is it about a location that makes it what it is? You’re trying to unearth, nail down, and define “ordinary”. You’re doing the opposite of most and trying to edit out the one in a million element defined by shock value. You’re looking for elements with no shock value. It’s day-to-day, down in the weeds, revenue generating railroading. It’s a world typified by dull browns, charcoal blacks, and a dead flat finish on everything. Weeds not golf courses. Operations that tend to be pretty similar week in and week out. 

Can I actually depict a place I've been?
The sensory disconnect - a vista lying in front of you and take a photo of it; you look at your screen and go, “hmmm that doesn’t capture what I’m feeling and experiencing right now”-  is an unsolvable problem.  There is only one thing that gets you pretty close and that’s visiting the actual place in person.  Experience the sights, sounds, smells, and panoramas and register those sensory experiences in your mind. Create vivid memories. When you do this, your brain makes an A-to-B connection when you look at your layout.

DESIGNING

Why are so many model railroaders hobbled by analysis paralysis?
Many modelers spend years, even decades, drawing various design iterations, hoping to avoid at all costs, God forbid….a mistake.  It’s a fool’s errand.  You can’t.  You’re far better off sketching something up that makes reasonable sense, diving in, and making any necessary tweaks as you go. Mistakes are unavoidable.  The ones I see the most?  Not designing towards your true interests, biting off more layout than you have the resources (time or skills) to build, and not accounting for human comfort (aisles, reach in distances, etc).  And the biggest error - in their quest to attain perfection before the first board is cut, modelers lose sight of the most catastrophic mistake - never building anything and gaining the necessary experience to make better decisions in the future. We're all human. We need a sense of making progress without getting bogged down - [it's the point at which] so many people leave the hobby. Get the track up and get it running, you've had some success, you're motivated. Instead of something that doesn't run with one difficult project after another. Momentum is really important.

Do we model the exception or the rule?
The key to achieving realism is to not just represent the ordinary, but to slightly overemphasize it. What would emphasizing the ordinary look like? Take an example where you have a city block with six mundane, white houses, one yellow one, and one red one. The white structures are the “ordinary” elements. The eye will be drawn to the red one. A stylistic approach of dialing things back would be to make the entire block white structures. If a section of town has a few faded, rusting corrugated, one story warehouses, you might emphasize those and give them more visual priority, more square footage, than something that is more eye catching.

How do we hone our eye for composition and realism?
If you want to be a good modeler, you're not going to get it in the sandbox of model railroading. All the answers have been in the art world. Visual literacy, composition and colour theory will take you everywhere. That's the path to improving your game and you'll build a sense of intuition for how to pull a scene together.

So theme is critical to that?
Theme selection is one of the most important strategic decisions you’ll ever make. Get it right and your enthusiasm will propel you forward for many years. Here are some of the things I look at. First and foremost I want something that “grabs me emotionally”, a place that I want to feel transported to. That’s the most difficult to find. Without that, I just have miniature technical exercise, that may be fun to build but won’t sustain me for the long haul.

What if I want the non-traditional smaller-than-a-basement layout?
Switching layouts, because of their size, are often viewed as substandard ventures by those who don’t have them.  They’re looked upon with pity. They apologize for their work.  If this is you, stop it, stop apologizing. Half of the switching layout owners I know are either financially comfortable. They have average-size to large homes. With switching, you can watch a single operation for twenty or thirty minutes, or hours in the case of a yard. It’s easier to create a higher quality level of modeling because you aren’t looking down the gun barrel of another thousand square feet of layout that needs attention.  Many of the owners of switching layouts I know are successful professionally. Those professions don’t leave a lot of free time.  Make your layout format decision based on the operational style you prefer and the amount of time you want to allocate to the hobby.  Stand by that decision, do good work, and stop apologizing.

TRACKPLANNING

Should the first step to draw a track plan, with software or just pencil and paper?
Drawing a track plan is the last, and easiest, aspect of layout design. Planning is the hardest because it involves doing some soul-searching and requires a level of self-awareness that we all “think” we have but often do not…myself included. Drawing, sketching, and daydreaming is easier and more fun than planning. I get it. However, if you don’t have a clear objective in mind as to what you want to accomplish you’re setting yourself up for trouble down the road.

Is a helix worth the trouble and space?
A double deck layout isn’t “slightly” more involved than a single deck one of the same surface area.  It’s not twice as complex.  There are so many factors in play that the complexity level is four, five, or maybe six times that of the single deck format.  The compromises to human comfort are numerous.  Construction methods are more complex. The published plans you see in the press?  Many are thought exercises that have not been built.  Many have significant issues that aren’t addressed in the article. [Another design consideration is] lighting. Life has gotten much easier in this regard.  LED tape lights are bright, inexpensive, thin, and easy to work with.  They're the way to go.

SPENDING

What would change in your modelling if you won the lottery?
The hypothetical possibility of becoming suddenly wealthy and how to apply that change of circumstances to the hobby. My guess is that on the modeling side, the answers would depend on how much modeling experience you have.  The fans of the hobby, those with little or no experience, would probably want to go large.  The more experienced modelers would probably be less likely to simply because they know the tradeoffs and have more self-awareness.  Experienced modelers are more likely to be mid-stream into a layout you’d need the jaws of life to pry them away from. What to do with all of that money? Hmmm.  All I can think of would be buying three or four top-of-the-line locomotives and sending those out for boutique electronic upgrades.  I could use a full-scale LED light upgrade in my basement.  Now I’m running out of  ideas.  As a scratch builder, I spend less than a hundred bucks a month on the hobby. I guess that’s it on the modeling front.

OPERATING

Why do so many modellers put operation last on their list?
I was a little surprised with the response I received from my recent Operations 101 YouTube videos. What it comes down to is that most of us don’t really know how to “play” with our trains. We put all of this effort into building our models….,we engage with the hobby community, and still it comes to “What in the sam hell do I do with all of this?!!”

So we shouldn't feel bad about holding our own operating session?
While they may not admit it publicly, many associate the phrase “operating session” with arbitrary rules, boring running practices, hokey gimmicks, complexity, stress, and fear of embarrassing yourself by making mistakes. There is ample justification for that reaction too. We can throw that distinction out the window though when we consider the reality that most of the time, especially with smaller layouts, we will be running by ourselves. 

Should we allow the modelling community to live rent-free in our imaginations?
Running trains alone in our layout room is an escape. It’s the one setting where we can create our own world and do things the way we want. How I, or anybody else does things, is absolutely irrelevant. Let’s be real, nobody cares how another hobbyist runs trains in the privacy of their own homes.

CONCLUSION...

Do me a favour and don't model any of Lance's layouts, be they in California, the Northeast US or Florida. Nobody should model someone else's layout, and it does regularly happen, from photos I've seen. Take the concepts and apply them. I don't want to see another Florida-based shelf layout unloading boxcars in the middle of the street! And whoever modelled the first carfloat or fishing wharf, I wish your ferry godmother had convinced you not to do it just for the halibut.

I'll end with another concept Lance has advanced. Taking a pause to enjoy a beverage, maybe a cup of coffee! He suggested it between switching moves, to sort of enjoy the moment. But I think it's useful at any point in our modelling. Better yet, sleep on it. The morning will have you (not slothfully) jumping out of bed and wanting to be...one of Canada's great layout designers!

Running extra...

Here's a layout view of my HO-scale Kingston's Hanley Spur layout (below). I'll probably never be able to live with the amount of negative space and the few tracks Lance prefers. Lance's words 'just' and 'only' appear in December 2024 Railroad Model CraftsmanYou tell me if I've taken any of Lance's comments to heart. (I do know I've taken my granddaughter to heart!) Though I've changed little on the layout since this photo was taken, she has changed a lot. I'm posting this photo here to give us something to reefer to!

The President's Club convened for President Jimmy Carter's funeral at Washington's National Cathedral today. The winds outside were so fierce that the sailor carrying the flag of the President was destabilized and blown almost sideways several times, even losing his sailor hat though thankfully it was replaced before the service began!

*Saturday Night Live 50th Anniversary Special will be broadcast  on February 16, 2025 - a three-hour prime-time special celebrating SNL's 50th season. This special will assemble together a large list of current and former cast members, hosts, and musical acts from throughout the show's fifty seasons. I wonder if Mike Myers/Linda Richman will appear. Like buttah!

Thursday, January 2, 2025

VIA and CN in Federal Court - The Facts

VIA applied to Federal Court seeking a judicial review, 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 stage of the case awaits, in this post I'll be highlighting some of the publicly-available material that both CN and VIA have presented to the Court. 

In this post, you'll find important information submitted to support VIA's application:

  • a timeline of communications between VIA and CN;
  • an independent and impartial analysis of CN's actions by rail-industry experts;
  • the damage being caused to VIA's reputation;
  • a few concluding editorial thoughts.
I've tried to keep the timeline clean for clarity. I've interspersed the expert analysis with some extracts from the documents submitted to the Court.

VIA submitted a total of 2,948 pages of material. Frankly, though some of it may be background for citations in VIA's legal strategy, much of it seems redundant to the layman. For instance, two complete bilingual sets of Canadian Rail Operating Rules (241 pages each), two sets of Transport Canada's Grade Crossing Standards (106 printed pages each) and 604 pages of supporting material comprising legal case precedents, industry standards and PowerPoints, etc. Faced with the daunting task of reviewing 3,000+ pages, I was glad of this redundancy!

Several VIA Rail executives, and three expert witnesses from within the rail industry, provided the most compelling material. Their affidavits are supported by mostly-relevant technical material, records of email communication, and minutes of meetings between CN and VIA.

CN's submitted a 65-page compendium of documents to the Court, comprising both versions (v1, v2) of its crossing supplement, VIA's Loss-of-Shunt Risk Assessment, and CN's letter to VIA's CEO. The final document in the compendium is a December 10 letter accompanying the Ministerial Order imposed on CN under Section 36 of the federal Railway Safety Act, with its requirement for CN to submit a report to the Transport Canada Rail Safety Directorate by January 10, 2025.

VIA-CN INTERACTIONS: A TIMELINE

It's important to put a pin in the following early-timeline items. They are relied upon and cited by CN for their actions in subsequent years of the VIA Venture implementation.

August 4, 2021 - CN emails VIA the ten possible consist configurations (four, five, six and eight units) ranked in priority order for simulation CN to review for shunting purposes if necessary:
In 2021, Siemens performs a shunt test with IDOT Venture cars. A presentation shared with CN provided a comparison of the axle loads of IDOT Venture cars and VIA cars in lightest load conditions. This was intended to help CN evaluate whether the results of the shunt tests of IDOT Venture cars would be representative of the cars VIA would be receiving. CN indicated no test was required by them.

October 15, 2021 - CN's Manager of Signals emails VIA: “CN will authorize the use of the new 24-axle train sets on its routes. A ten-day notification to CN is required before placing these train sets in revenue service on any CN route.” “CN reserves the right to place any restriction it deems necessary should shunting problems occur.”  

December 3, 2021 - CN issues Operating Bulletin 638 allowing VIA Venture equipment to operate LRC NB speeds on the Kingston Subdivision.

July 25, 2022 - VIA emails CN: "We are planning on operating to Oshawa on July 27 and to Toronto on August 4 and August 9. Could you please ensure that the bulletin enclosed includes the whole Kingston Sub, we are missing the Great Lakes portion? To our knowledge, “we have no outstanding open topic with regards to the authorization of the new Fleet with CN. Can we get LRC NB authorization for all Corridor? If not, which info is missing?” [Here's Set 1 returning from SW Ontario through Kingston on August 6.]

July 27, 2022 - VIA emails CN: “Since it is our understanding that the CN technical review is completed, and to avoid this situation in the future, could we get a written confirmation by CN that the Host Railway Package submitted by VIA to CN has been reviewed and deem complete, and that CN has no further questions". CN responds that “Engineering will be the ones to sign off. The bulletin confirms your movement also."

October 24, 2022 - VIA emails CN: “VIA Rail is planning to start passenger service with the Venture Fleet on November 8th, 2022. Daily Consists issued by VIA’s Operations Control Centre were accessible by CN showing which VIA equipment was operating on each train. VIA claims this transparency was provided to CN in real-time. On the same day, CN's Manager of Signals - Engineering sent an email to VIA's Project Director for the Rolling Stock Acquisition, part of the Corridor Fleet Renewal Program (New Fleet), asking which Venture configuration VIA would be putting into service. The response was, "Same configuration we have been testing, Long Trainset: Loco + 4 coaches + cab car. We will not change it until we test shorter consist and agree with CN on the path forward."

November 1, 2022 - CN issues Operating Bulletin 640 removing exceptions for VIA Venture equipment on the Kingston Sub.

May 31, 2023 - As part of discussions on Fall 2023 schedule changes, VIA transmits a copy of its Equipment Plan for each Train for each Day of Week from their Network Planning tool. This document includes information showing Venture equipment planned for Ottawa-Toronto and Toronto-Montreal trains. 

August 15, 2023 - VIA emails CN regarding future schedule changes, "Once we have accepted enough Siemens trains, and are using them in full time revenue service, we believe at that point it would be advantageous to re-run the TPCs for the markets which are fully-covered by Siemens fleet (every day of operation). At that point we also do expect to change anchor times as we will also be removing the wye-on-departure for all of the Quebec-Montreal-Ottawa trains. As we accept Siemens consists and put them into revenue service on a near-monthly pace, some of the trains are expected to change equipment types."

March 6, 2024 - Since January, VIA and CN had again been emailing re: schedule changes. Copied in the email chain was Hoang Tran, who in October would famously use the phrase 'I found out today', referring to VIA's Ventures operating outside Quebec-Montreal-Ottawa (QMO) easternmost portion of the Corridor. As Senior Director, Regulatory, System Safety, and Passenger Operations at CN, Mr Tran had risen quickly at CN since 2018, having held similar senior roles at VIA since 2013. 

March 22, 2024 - Ron Bartels, VIA Specialist Director, Engineering emails, "Jacques Luce from CN just called to tell me that they have noticed some potentially inconsistent shunting incidents with some VIA trains. He didn’t have all the details but wants to have a call with VIA next Monday afternoon at 3:00 PM. He mentioned Venture trains and also trains with P42 leading. He said we may need to increase our axle count, but at the moment they don’t have enough info to come to any conclusions." Graphic data from nine crossings had been presented by the National Loss of Shunt Technical Committee: Floating Shunt Phenomenon Overview for VIA Rail dated April 1, 2024. The data was from March 22 (erratic shunt detected) as well as XP-4 grade crossing protection data on March 26 during the passage of VIA No 24 and CN No 121. Importantly, at this time Ventures had been operating on the CN Kingston Subdivision to Coteau since November 2022, and to Toronto since October 2023 without any restrictions from CN. In addition, the restrictions imposed by CN in March, 2024 applied to all VIA trains, not just Venture-equipped trains.

March 28, 2024 - VIA requests additional information regarding restrictions that CN issued for certain grade crossings on the Drummondville Subdivision "DRMV" for all passenger equipment operating with less than 32 axles: at MP 8.16, MP 33.63, MP 40.02, MP 46.07, MP 46.35, MP 51.72, MP 55.66, MP 60.54, MP 60.80, MP 61.83, MP 64.03, MP 74.11 and MP 80.17. A VIA analysis of the CN data subsequently showed that 77 of the 148 occurrences raised as issues by CN were identified at one specific railway crossing on CN’s Drummondville subdivision (MP 40.02). These repetitive occurrences would point to an infrastructure issue that may have been specific to that crossing.

March 29, 2024 - CN responds to a VIA inquiry regarding the Drummondville Subdivision restrictions, stating, “I cannot emphasize enough to you and the rest of VIA Rail this is not a wayside equipment problem. This is a rail-to-wheel interface issue that causes sporadic shunting.”

April 9, 2024 - CN shares a PowerPoint summarizing poor shunting incidents from the Drummondville subdivision and their investigations into loss of shunt incidents in the U.S. as well as data from the Drummondville subdivision documenting 148 short warning events - what CN considered to be short warning times at seven Drummondville Subdivision crossings equipped with XP-4 grade crossing predictors (GCP) from December, 2023 to March, 2024 - the data upon which CN had relied when issuing the 103.1(f) special instructions issued on March 22, 2024. VIA analysis of the data shows that 77 occurred at a single crossing with only one non-compliant. CN did not identify whether warning times were tested for all 49 Drummondville Subdivision crossings or only for the seven identified crossings; compare warning times of VIA trains with those of other rolling stock equipment (such as freight trains), or identify whether warning times involved VIA’s 24-axle Venture trains, its Legacy trains (HEP/LRC), or any other non-VIA trains. This data comprises the only information ever disclosed to VIA relevant to any potential LOS.

May 21, 2024 - CN responds to VIA's intention to file applications for exemptions with the Minister of Transport to allow it to operate Venture equipment, up to 100 mph on Class 5 track at five-inch cant deficiency in curves. CN had no objection. However, because CN currently only allows passenger operations at either four-inch or six-inch cant deficiency, VIA will be restricted to four-inch cant deficiency speeds on CN track. Somewhat ominously, Lynda Macleod, Senior Manager of Regulatory Affairs noted that Ventures may further be speed restricted on CN infrastructure due to shunting issues associated with the short train lengths that VIA wishes to operate.

June 26, 2024 - CN approves moves for VIA's June 19 plan for the inauguration train of the Venture fleet in South-Western Ontario with operating speed requirements as well as the restriction that “PASSENGER TRAINS OPERATING WITH LESS THAN 32 AXLES MUST PROVIDE PROTECTION IN ACCORDANCE WITH RULE 103.1(F) AT PUBLIC CROSSING AT MILE xxx (SUB)”, applied to a list of 75 GCP-4000 technology crossings on the Chatham (33) and Dundas Subdivisions (42). When CN imposed those special instructions, VIA’s Venture trains had already been deployed and operated in Quebec-Montreal-Ottawa service, and on the Montreal-Toronto and Ottawa-Toronto lanes. On most of those other routes, except at certain limited crossings on the Drummondville subdivision, the Venture trains were operating without 103.1(f) special instructions. VIA did not start operating Venture trains again in the SWO region until October, 2024.

August 26, 2024 - CN issues an operating bulletin that, among other things, amends the Great Lakes Division timetable to state that the P+ speeds are applicable to Venture equipment.

October 11, 2024 - Late in the afternoon of the day before Thanksgiving weekend, VIA’s busiest weekend of the entire year, upon suddenly learning that VIA Venture-equipped trains were operating west of Ottawa, CN surprisingly issues a restriction on VIA’s Venture equipment stating that “Unless operating with 32 axles or shunt enhancer, the following crossing mileages listed under each subdivision must be manually protected unless it is known that warning devices have been operating for at least 20 seconds as per CROR 103.1(f)” Loss-Of-Shunt (LOS) restrictions. CN states that its minimum train length is 32 axles and that VIA’s 24-axle Venture equipment has a known shunting issue. Although the CN Crossing Supplement v1 features both the CN and VIA logos side by side, this document was not issued by VIA. It was issued by CN unilaterally. The document purported to cover all Corridor public grade crossings equipped with GCP technology using track circuits to detect trains. The list of crossings therein was so expansive, and perhaps incompletely-checked, that it includes 16 crossings that do not exist; two crossings that are not owned by CN but instead by Metrolinx; and ten crossings that are private grade crossings over which CROR 103.1(f) does not apply.

VIA's Specialist Director, Operating Practices & Transportation Training, with 18 years' experience in the railway industry, noted that when railway companies issue 103.1(f) special instructions, they do so in conjunction with remediation efforts to rectify the condition affecting the relevant crossings. He could think of no other instance when 103.1(f) special instructions were used as permanent blanket rules to perpetually restrict operations of a specific type of rolling stock across all crossings within a large portion of a network.

Emails sent that day within CN include the statement “I found out today that the Venture fleet was now operating on territories where there are crossings equipped with GCP 4000 crossing prediction technology” outside of the Quebec-Montreal-Ottawa territory. CN claims it discovered VIA had been operating Venture train sets on the CN Kingston subdivision two years after the fact, using this to justify imposing restrictions on the QMO, despite being aware that VIA had been operating these train sets on the QMO (which includes a portion of the CN Kingston Subdivision) for approximately two years: 
  • October 2022 - Quebec City-Montreal-Ottawa service
  • October 2023 - Ottawa-Toronto and Montreal-Toronto routes
  • October 2024 - Southwestern Ontario (SWO).
The email, full of mistakes and misperceptions, originated with Hoang Tran, CN's Senior Director, Regulatory, System Safety, and Passenger Operations to CN's Vice-President of Safety, Matthew McLaren. At lightning speed, over the next 37 minutes, one of the CN executives who was cc'd on this email then forwarded it to several contacts at Transport Canada. From TC, the email was sent to VIA's CEO, Mario Peloquin. This is the first known use of the 'I found out today' phrase..

October 14, 2024 - VIA's Vice-President of Railway Operations emails CN's Vice-President of Network Operations to follow up on texts and emails they had exchanged on the weekend CN imposed its speed reductions. Requests were made in the email asking for CN to tell VIA more, in four succinct points, about the basis of CN's decision to implement:

"1. What made it necessary to implement these new restrictions on October 11, 2024, as opposed to another date.
2. The risk analysis supporting the decision.
3. The list of malfunctions of automatic warning devices involving VIA trains in the portion of the network where the new restrictions apply; and
4. The reports relating to those malfunctions or any supporting documentation."

October 16, 2024 - A second email is sent, the VIA VP questioning why it took five days for CN to provide suitable answers to VIA while drastically affecting VIA operations on CN trackage. Once again, the CN VP trots out the "I found out today" story, "On October 11, when it was discovered that these Venture train sets were operating in expanded service with crossings which may experience shunt loss and thus be unprotected, CN took immediate measures to issue the proper instructions to protect the safety of train operations and crossings."

October 18, 2024 - Mario Peloquin (President and CEO, VIA) sends a letter to Tracey Robinson (President and CEO, CN) stating that VIA considers CN’s decision unjustified and harmful, "Respectfully, CN's decision of last Friday does not appear to be justifiable by safety concerns, or any issues attributable to VIA Rail's new Venture fleet."
An excerpt showing VIA's understanding of its Venture operations timeline on CN trackage:

October 23, 2024 - CN and VIA executives at the Vice-President level meet at VIA's headquarters in Montreal to discuss the LOS issue, each side's justifications for their position, and next steps. Per meeting minutes, in one of the discussion points CN accepted the responsibility of not realizing the presence of Venture fleet outside the Quebec-Montreal-Ottawa corridor. Present at the meeting were VIA's Chief Service Delivery, Chief Strategy Officer, Vice President Railway Operations, General Counsel, Director Project Management – New Fleet, Director Enterprise Risks, Director Network Operations and Railway Safety Governance; CN's Executive VP & COO Network Operations, VP Network Operations, VP Safety & Environmental, VP Engineering, AVP Engineering, Expert Sr Network Operations Strategy and Hoang Tran, Director Sr Regulatory & Passenger Operations. Minutes of the meeting were shared by VIA with CN.

The minutes were circulated to CN. CN legal staff  edited the minutes to present their version of events that had occurred on October 11 (draft in black, CN revision in blue) including this one telling example:
Another example of CN adding its preferred messaging:

October 29, 2024 - Top CN and VIA staff meet again in a 30-minute Virtual Teams meeting to discuss the LOS issue during which CN indicates, among other things, that its understanding of LOS stemmed from its experience in the U.S. and that the problem is the wheel to rail interaction that occurs with lightweight rolling stock with a narrow and trued wheel profile and low axle count (under 32). CN concludes, "This is not a Venture car-specific problem. This applies to lightweight rolling stock, with a narrow and true wheel profile/trainsets with a low axle count (under 32) - Venture falls into this category." VIA disagrees with CN’s conclusion in the absence of data. VIA disagrees with further testing without a risk assessment produced by CN. An excerpt from the meeting minutes:
Present at this meeting were VIA's Director Project Management – New Fleet, Director Enterprise Risks, Director Network Operations and Railway Safety Governance, Specialist Director, Infrastructure; CN's AVP Engineering, Senior Manager Engineering Signal Design S&C Standards, Senior Manager Regulatory Affairs, Senior Manager Passenger Operations, and Hoang Tran - Sr Director Regulatory & Passenger Operations. An email accompanying the minutes sent by VIA's Director, Network Operations & Railway Safety Governance Railway Operations to VIA executives up to and including the CEO shows VIA's continuing requests for data that drove CN's decisions, as well as CN's ongoing testing of unspecified crossings, actually 24 crossings spread over five CN subdivisions:

November 5, 2024 - CN's Chief Network Operating Officer Pat Whitehead replies in a three-page letter  to Mario Peloquin’s 18 October letter, stating, “The decision to impose restrictions on the crossings was based on CN’s work carried out with the National Loss of Shunt Committee in the U.S..., combined with additional data points from short warning times (below regulatory minimum warning times) observed on the Drummondville Subdivision” and that “CN must caution that it is not prepared to take a risk of loss of life, however statistically low it might be”.
November 27, 2024 - CN issues updated LOS restrictions stating “Unless operating with 32 axles or shunt enhancer, the following crossing mileages listed under each subdivision must be manually protected unless it is known that Minimum Required Time has been met as per CROR 103.1”. VIA issues informational notice VN24-033 to its crews:

INDEPENDENT ANALYSIS BY RAIL-INDUSTRY EXPERTS

DB E.C.O. North America was brought on-board by VIA to provide an independent, impartial analysis of CN's actions. Specifically, whether CN followed industry standards when implementing the speed reductions, and whether CN used sufficient analysis and evidence to justify what DB termed 'Loss-Of-Shunt (LOS) restrictions'. This was not to be a detailed technical analysis that would have required bipartite buy-in input from CN, nor was it intended to serve as a risk-based assessment.

LOS is not specific to VIA, and causes are multifaceted and therefore not easy to pin down. It is always a risk and must always be mitigated by railways. The only way to prevent it 100% is not to run any trains! CN's sweeping LOS restrictions were a knee-jerk reaction to a single risk factor, not based on a comprehensive understanding of the safety risk level inherent in VIA's Venture operations. When CN's key decision-makers suddenly became aware on October 11, 2024 of where and when Venture operations were taking place outside of the Montreal-Ottawa-Quebec (MOQ) lanes, they immediately adopted wholesale, unscientific LOS restrictions already in place on Amtrak trains operating in some corridors on CN trackage in the U.S., disregarding previous preparations and testing performed by VIA. 

DB E.C.O. North America summarized their expert analysis with four key findings:

1.  CN's implementation of LOS restrictions was reactionary, without proper root-cause analysis. 

Poor lines of communication existed between CN and VIA. Peers in various departments talked to each other; there was rarely a single point-of-contact at the executive level. CN's Canadian passenger operations team did not effectively 'own' its relationship to VIA, unlike its relationship to Amtrak in the U.S. This allowed them to be caught off-guard despite ongoing communication efforts emanating from VIA. 

LOS restrictions made exemptions for On-Board Shunt Enhancers (OSE). OSEs are illegal in Canada at the time of the publication of CN's crossing supplement. FRA approval in the U.S. was only granted on September 20, 2024 as part of ongoing research into OSE effectiveness. CN created an unattainable solution, based on CN policies in place in the U.S., not reflective of the regulatory climate in which Canadian railways operate. Isometric view of a Park Engineering OSE antenna for Amtrak's Siemens ALC-42 SF4 locomotive trucks:
CN ignored VIA's independent static LOS testing performed at the MMC in October, 2021. The report on the testing by engineering firm HATCH concluded that the train's wheelsets has passed the static test and from an S&C point of view could proceed to the dynamic testing. VIA also engaged HATCH to perform independent shunt testing of Venture trainsets in dynamic mode on its own Montreal-Ottawa Alexandria Subdivision in December, 2021. Subsequently, dynamic testing was also carried out on the Metrolinx operation network. HATCH tested a Venture consist on CN/Metrolinx Guelph, Kingston and Oakville Subdivisions in August, 2022. Tested to AREMA and AAR standards, with HATCH concluding in that report, "The train can operate on all Metrolinx-owned territories with no less axles (24) than the consist used on the test held December 6, 2021 between Limoges and Carlsbad Spring on the VIA Alexandria Subdivision." The Venture trains' wheelsets were factory-tested by Siemens, who confirmed their electrical resistance. 

During and after the testing period, the Ventures were in extensive use, and if there had been any shunting problems, they would have been reported to the relevant authorities. The testing campaign that started in October of 2021 is still ongoing. Every train is undergoing a commissioning and burn-in period of approximately six weeks and 1,000 miles of dynamic testing before entering revenue service.

2. CN did not follow Risk Assessment (RA) nor Safety Management System (SMS) rail-industry standards in its implementation: the risk was tolerable, risk severity was critical, but the failure rate was improbable.

CN missed an opportunity to explore other solutions to mitigate LOS risks transparently and fairly. CN relied on incomplete data from one problem area with a 'short warning time' problem - on its Drummondville Subdivision. As early as March, 2024 seven grade crossings in the area west of Drummondville had CN special instructions under CROR Rule 103.1(f) applied to them, with six more added on March 26.

CN did not consult with operational staff nor experts to collect and analyze data, nor consult with VIA staff, or document either. CN applied industry practices to the 2017 Alstom GCP software issue in the US that showed GCP software issues can themselves cause crossing safety risks, not relevant to the Drummondville Subdivision issues. As required by SMS Regulations, VIA has adopted a robust safety management system. According to Transport Canada, VIA's is one of the best, if not the best in the industry, designed to continuously manage risks related to safety matters and to deliver on VIA’s safety action.

VIA released its own Risk Assessment (RA) on October 18, 2024 in the wake of CN-imposed speed-reductions.  VIA’s assessment of the loss of shunt risk related to the Venture trains based on the data points provided by CN and available data from VIA’s own internal investigations drawn from the existing and available data indicates that the severity and probability of an occurrence, based on the CN data of 148 short warning times over almost 26,000 crossing activations that are assumed to have been within specifications, is very low/tolerable. This is because the likelihood of a collision between a train and road user, stemming from a short warning time due to shunt loss, is very low. VIA’s ongoing investigation of occurrences of shunting issues in 2024 has identified climate/extreme weather conditions, rail contamination, absence of freight, and length of crossing approaches as determining factors in intermittent shunting. VIA's RA estimates the risk ratio at 0.001% (VIA assessment) and 0.004% (CN assessment).

VIA's analysis of CN's data from 148 incidents, all on the CN Drummondville Sub:
VIA's analysis of data from 39 incidents From January 1 to October 17, 2024 not limited to Venture-equipped trains on four (Alexandria Brockville, Smiths Falls, Chatham) Subdivisions of its own infrastructure.
VIA made several observations from actions taken on its infrastructure from its risk assessment data analysis that would also apply to CN mitigation strategies. VIA also made use of data recorders, motion detection, monitoring of signalling incidents, and crossing approach instrumentation modifications.
  • Rail grinding and rail brushing have a beneficial effect on measurements taken until the next rainfall.
  • Repeated and alternating rain and heat adversely affect train detection.
  • Controlling vegetation limits the spread of contaminants on the rail, cutting the risk of detection faults.
  • Poor train detection is not linked to a specific type of rolling stock.
  • The first train of the day on a subdivision does not generate more detection faults.
  • Sectors with no freight traffic are more likely to have variable train detection results
The letter from CN's Chief Network Operating Officer Pat Whitehead to VIA's CEO makes several claims not supported by any evidence. He clearly links CN's restrictions with the U.S. National Loss of Shunt Committee and the Drummondville Subdivision warning times, writing "The decision to impose restrictions...was based on CN's work...with the Committee, combined with...short warning times observed on the Drummondville Subdivision. VIA's equipment presents similar characteristics to Amtrak's equipment and is now experiencing the same issues." The letter also links the minimum 32-axle requirement with its imposition on the U.S. portion of [the CN] network.

"As VIA was contemplating the introduction of the Venture fleet, VIA requested that CN review five different equipment configurations for shunting purposes. It was determined that field testing would not be required because of CN’s extensive experience with the IDOT Venture fleet. CN authorized a 24-axle configuration (with a locomotive on each end as per VIA’s representations) for operation on CN with one condition and one caveat: VIA would provide a 10-day notice to CN before placing these train sets into revenue service on any CN route so that CN could deploy test equipment to monitor these movements and CN reserved the right to place any restriction it deemed necessary should shunting problems occur. VIA did not deploy the Venture fleet according to the 24-axle configuration that was authorised by CN. Instead of having loco-coaches(4)-loco as approved by CN, VIA deployed their Venture fleet in a loco-coaches(4)-cab car configuration, not meeting CN’s shunting requirements of a 24-axle count." VIA has never operated the Ventures with two locomotives, despite that consist configuration being one of five possible consist configurations initially listed by VIA for simulation.

The letter also mentions the one-and-only addition of non-Venture [Legacy/HEP] cars to a Venture set: "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." 

The one-and-only picture I've seen of the above-mentioned consist (below - 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!
The letter also perpetuated is the 'I found out today' phrase. "Contrary to what was stated in your letter, up to October 11, CN was unaware that the Venture Fleet had been operating outside of the QMO, as VIA did not provide the required 10-day notice to CN. CN had repeatedly requested since 2021 that VIA provide a 10-day notice prior to placing these train sets into revenue service on any CN route so that CN could deploy test equipment along its route to monitor these movements. Despite this requirement, VIA operated over 1,400 VIA trains with Venture equipment outside of the QMO without notice and without any restrictions." [5,000 total trains since 2022 was the number provided by VIA.]

Mr Whitehead also acknowledges Ventures' sufficient shunt: "CN has confirmed to VIA that its crossing infrastructure also meets regulatory requirements. VIA has requested validation of CN’s compliance. To that end, CN has offered to demonstrate to VIA and to Transport Canada that it meets the regulatory requirements of the GCS by systematically detecting railway equipment in any part of the track circuit and a shunt of 0.06 ohms from VIA Venture trains and for any other train."

3. CN's actions constituted a risk reallocation, shifting the risk to other parties disproportionately i.e. VIA head-end crews, causing cognitive overload. The LOS restrictions did not eliminate the risk, they merely shifted it.

By not conducting a Risk Assessment, CN had an incomplete understanding of how risk levels can increase at all points in the event chain of a VIA Venture approaching a grade crossing. CN introduced more 'net' opportunities for safety incidents to happen upon issuing its Crossing Supplement. VIA locomotive engineers counting off the seconds, while reducing and resuming speed at multiple unsigned grade crossings can certainly cause a loss of focus. It is now estimated that 50% of the engineer's total travel time is dedicated to adhering to CN-imposed tasks.

VIA's locomotive engineers work in teams of two per train, with the operating locomotive engineer sitting on the right operating the train using controls like throttles and brakes, and the in-charge locomotive engineer sitting on the left whose primary focus is to interpret signals (such as speed signals, route signals, restrictive signals, station stops, temporary slow orders, and signs indicating the presence of workers) and communicating with rail-traffic controllers to relay information about traffic conditions, among other tasks. The Crossing Supplement v1 required locomotive engineers operating VIA Venture trains to perform the following tasks for every identified grade crossing:

a. Identify unmarked locations situated approximately one mile before the grade crossing;
b. Slow down the train starting at such unmarked locations and manage proper deceleration using various controls to ensure that speed be reduced to 45 mph when passing by the whistle post situated 0.25 mile before a grade crossing;
c. Approach the crossing at steady speed of 45 mph while being prepared to stop;
d. Visually observe automatic warning devices (i.e., lights flashing);
e. Measure at least 20 seconds from the time that automatic warning devices have started operating;
f. Following confirmation that automatic warning devices have operated for 20 seconds, bring the train speed back up to Timetable speed which would varies from 65 to 100 mph depending on the location;

Likewise, the Crossing Supplement v2 now requires engineers operating VIA Venture trains to perform the following tasks for every identified grade crossing:

a. - c. as above;
d. Determine whether the upcoming crossing is gate-equipped or has a specifically prescribed Minimum Required Time;
e. Visually observe: (i) the gate in the horizontal position (when the crossing is gate- equipped), or (ii) automatic warning devices, i.e., lights flashing (when the crossing is not equipped with a gate system);
f. Measure at least: (i) 5 seconds from the time that the gate has come down to the horizontal position (when the crossing is gate-equipped), or (ii) the specifically prescribed time ranging from 20 to 25 seconds from the time that automatic warning devices have started operating (when the crossing is not equipped with a gate system);
g. Following confirmation that the gate or automatic warning devices have been in the horizontal position or have operated for the Minimum Required Time, bring the train speed back up to normal speed of approximately 90 to 100 mph.

CN Chief Operating Officer Patrick Whitehead — who once was a locomotive engineer — acknowledged the increased risk due to the cognitive load on VIA locomotive engineers from the restrictions imposed by CN.

Identifying locations situated approximately one mile before the grade crossing imposes on VIA’s locomotive engineers a constant anxiety and cognitive load. CN did not mark such locations with any post or sign, and VIA’s locomotive engineers bear the constant pressure of estimating the distance between their train and the next grade crossing subject to the Crossing Supplement, which is especially true with poor visual conditions or in locations with few easily identifiable visual cues. VIA’s locomotive engineers have reported that as a result of the Crossing Supplement, they experience significant fatigue and a feeling of being burnt out. Absenteeism increased among locomotive engineers, who also needed to take breaks more frequently. VIA locomotive engineers even took sick days on account of the added stress resulting from the Crossing Supplement.

4. CN did not prove that LOS issues were caused by VIA's Ventures. There is limited justification for the LOS restrictions. CN did attempt to, nor conclusively define the root cause.

CN is incorrect to solely focus on Ventures as the cause of potential LOS issues. LOS does not apply only to Ventures. VIA operated trains over CN trackage for many decades with as few as 16 axles. Why would the 24-axle Venture have a higher inherent risk than an 24-axle LRC or HEP consist, or a CN freight with fewer than 32 axles?

In its November 5 letter to VIA, CN doubles down on its version of improvements that VIA can make, writing that "CN has proposed alternatives that would permit VIA to operated unrestricted over crossings, such as adding cars to meet the minimum 32-axle requirement or installing on-board shunt enhancers." As a gesture, CN informs VIA in the letter that it "has created a task-force that will perform tests at 24 crossings on three different subdivisions over a period of 19 days. The test protocol will be shared with both VIA and Transport Canada and parties will be invited to participate in the data gathering and analysis. CN expects that VIA will participate in the testing that will occur on the infrastructure to determine regulatory compliance. We hope to demonstrate in full transparency that the actions we have taken are appropriate and in the best interests of safety".

In mid-December, 2024 CN foremen were stationed at level crossings along CN's Kingston Subdivision. Their role was to flag certain crossings to allow VIA trains, Venture and non-Venture, to pass over the crossings at track speed, while visually observing proper operation of the gates and crossing warning protection. This was probably to verify information that's automatically recorded in the crossing signal bungalows, also manually recording CN and VIA trains' axle counts and speeds.

Though LOS issues can be attributed to the characteristics of passenger trains, freight trains can encounter these same issues as well. CN only applied restrictions to Constant-Warning technology (GCP) crossings i.e. equipped with GCP-3000, GCP-4000 or XP-4 systems. There is no industry consensus that CN's 32-axle standard is the number-of-axles cut-off above which LOS is no longer a concern.

VIA has resisted adding cars to Venture trains to increase the number of axles from 24 to 32. "Train cars are not easily interchangeable and adding legacy cars to Venture trains would be impractical from a compatibility standpoint. VIA did consider and assess this option, but determined that it was not feasible. Legacy equipment is being cycled out of service entirely by early 2026, because of previously determined engineering retirement dates. By this time, Venture trains will represent 100% of VIA’s equipment. Ordering new compatible Venture cars, in addition to coming at a very significant cost, could take approximately 12 to 24 months. Removing cars from some Venture trains and transferring them to other trains to increase their number of axles would reduce VIA's fleet size by about 50% until new cars could be ordered and installed. Following a thorough risk assessment, VIA also determined that coupling two trains together to increase axle numbers, would increase other safety risks and pose other operational challenges to such a degree that this is not a viable option either."

By January 2025, 55% of VIA’s trains in revenue service are expected to be Venture trains. This is expected rise to 73% by June 2025, 82% by December 2025, and 100% by early 2026, when Venture trains are expected to cover the entirety of VIA’s Corridor ridership. Over the coming months, restrictions imposed on VIA’s Venture trains operating on CN’s infrastructure, which have already affected thousands of passengers, will increase and affect millions.

VIA'S CONCERN FOR ITS REPUTATION 

VIA has monitored delays resulting from the CN crossing supplements and currently estimates that such delays amount to the following additional travel times:
  • QuĆ©bec-MontrĆ©al (scheduled time of 3 hours 22 minutes): 15 to 25 minutes of delay.
  • MontrĆ©al-Ottawa (scheduled time of 2 hours 1 minute): 5 to 10 minutes of delay.
  • Ottawa-Toronto (scheduled time of 4 hours 38 minutes): 25 to 45 minutes of delay.
  • MontrĆ©al-Toronto (scheduled time of 5 hours 17 minutes): 35 to 50 minutes of delay.
  • Toronto-Windsor (scheduled time of 4 hours 17 minutes): 25 to 35 minutes of delay.
  • Toronto-Sarnia (scheduled time of 4 hours 51 minutes): 20 to 30 minutes of delay.
VIA’s October On-Time Performance (OTP) dropped to approximately 25%. It is anticipated that overall OTP for Q4-2024 will similarly drop, to an all-time low of around 30% as a result of the crossing supplements. Aside from VIA’s poor OTP during the pandemic, the lowest OTP that VIA had ever historically experienced was 46.3% during Q3-2023.

VIA supplied several sample communications received from passengers, specifically mentioning the CN-imposed speed reductions:
CN-imposed speed reductions, the related delays to Venture-equipped VIA trains and associated cratering of VIA’s OTP have harmed VIA’s image and reputation, with numerous customers voicing their complaints and dissatisfaction onboard, online and by phone. Many frustrated VIA travellers have changed their travelling habits and switched to other modes of transportation such as car, bus, or plane.

VIA removed from its webpage the list of its trains that were Venture-equipped. VIA suggested the page was removed because the use of Ventures was so widespread that it wasn't a useful page anymore. Meanwhile, on social media, potential passengers booking passage were actively asking which trains were the 'new trains' so they could avoid booking those departures that were routinely arriving, and in some cases, departing late. The only workaround was on traincar dot info, which lists fairly reliable consisting information.

New Venture trains are the very public image symbolizing VIA’s modernization efforts and identity for the 21st century. VIA has devoted considerable energy and advertising dollars to hype the arrival of the Ventures. When the Ventures are associated with unreliability and failure, it's VIA’s enduring image that is tainted permanently as a result of CN’s crossing supplements.

"I FOUND OUT TODAY"

When I first heard this phrase, sent in an internal CN email from Hoang Tran, Senior Director, Regulatory, System Safety, and Passenger Operations at CN on October 11, I just about fell over. I wondered how anyone occupying the upper levels of management could not truly have known this. Every foreman, section hand, operating trades employee, S&C maintainer and anyone else who lived within a mile of CN's Kingston Subdivision would remember when they first observed their first VIA Venture. I mean, how could you miss them? The fact that 1-2 years later, a senior executive at CN was just learning this is not only shocking, it also strains credulity. All I can think of are childish elementary school experiences:  (eyes-covered) "I don't see you, I don't see you", (ears-covered) "la-la-la!" and sheepishly telling the teacher, "the dog ate my homework". The 'I found out today' phrase reveals either being remarkably removed from reality, or an absolutely asinine attempt to feign ignorance preceding CN's over-reaction and imposition of LOS restrictions. 

THANK YOU, FEDERAL COURTS

Canada's Constitution says the administration of justice (i.e. law enforcement, courts) is a provincial responsibility. The Federal Court of Canada is a narrow exception with specific jurisdiction. In that respect, it is similar to the Tax Court or the military justice system.

I find it interesting that VIA responded to the following questions in an Access To Information request ...

What specific evidence was supplied to VIA by CN regarding specific concerns or any close-calls in 2022, 2023 or 2024? What operational adjustments were considered or made to ensure safety prior to October 11, 2024 in response to those concerns?  What  other  technology,  remedies  or  further  operational  adjustments  is  VIA discussing or considering implementing ? Has VIA discussed or considered lengthening Venture trains to 32 or more axles to meet CN's concerns.

...made mere days after CN brought in its special instructions, by writing in part, "An application for judicial review before the Federal Court has been filed on November 12, 2024 regarding the “Crossing  Supplement  for  VIA  Venture Equipment”.  The  information  requested is therefore protected under [the following sections of] the ATIA." Effectively shielding VIA from releasing certain information to the public.

In the same response, VIA's ATIP Co-Ordinator helpfully pointed not only to VIA's application before the court, but also the case file involving CN and VIA in the publicly-available Federal Courts Files webpage. There, one can find and request documents submitted to the Court, as part of the Online Access to Court Records pilot project, initiated in September, 2022.

I am reminded of that scene from the movie 'A Few Good Men' in which Jack Nicholson's sinister character sneeringly says to Tom Cruise's character, "You can have all the [information] you want, Danny. But you have to ask me nicely." In fact, one study of 432 requests to 25 federal departments, agencies and crown corporations found that the federal government denied information almost 80 per cent of the time.

So thank you, Federal Courts for your transparency. It took only slightly longer to gain access to the documents than it did to create this post. Much quicker than VIA's ATI document delivery time of 2-4 weeks!

Running extra...

SORRY, NOT SORRY

It's happened a few times... 
When I've presented facts that appear to support VIA in blog posts on the HEP testing, Venture implementation, or VIA Rail incidents, I've been called a 'VIA apologist'. (If I was calling someone that, I would instead use the term VIApologist. It's shorter.) I don't work for VIA, I have no reason to apologize for VIA, I occasionally travel aboard VIA. In any posts on VIA topics, where I might be called an apologist, remember that I'm a taxpayer, and as such I help to fund VIA. I want VIA to succeed and continue to prosper, perpetually without a proper mandate. On Trackside Treasure, I present evidence (VIAvidence!) on both sides of these Venture issues. I didn't create these problems, I didn't accumulate or fabricate the evidence. It's just facts. I'm sorry if you think I'm sorry. I'm not. But I do think the Venture implementation is in a sorry state due to CN's actions!

REACTIONS

Received from among the 1,320 views in the first day after publishing this post...

Wow, very detailed and well documented post. Will be interesting to see what happens.

It seems that someone at CN with a different perspective on risk tolerance entered the process at mid-point and said “Hold everything” or words to that effect. And then others piled on, possibly with the addition of CN’s lawyers. And then CN clumsily walked back its appetite and acceptance for the Ventures. CN’s handling of the matter does seem to have veered away from standard safety analysis.

Seems like one specific person went on a power trip and everyone just went along with it.

Either you care to know what is going on on your tracks or you don’t…

Really detailed summary. Thanks for that! It's a lot to unpack. I can't estimate the number of times I heard 'this is the first time I've heard of this' or 'nobody told me' when dealing with the government and I suspect large corporations are no different. People agreeing to or signing off on something that is out of their lane isn't surprising. It is also a great way to spread out accountability to the point that, in the end, nobody is accountable.

I know more than the average person because of my connections, but your blog was well-written and easy to follow. It’s great for work people. You did a really good job, and it’s more information than anything we’ve gotten at work[ VIA].

Excellent write up, and I can’t believe how staggeringly stupid this whole thing is.

Super article, lots of detail, lots of smoking guns (and apparently stupidity).

Thanks you for publishing this document and your analysis. Clearly the clusterf@&k going on at CN executive is a grave safety concern for how they operate their entire network.

This is of great interest to me and an ongoing live example that I am closely monitoring thanks to your blog. Keep up the reporting, this is a great service to those of us interested or working in rail!