Trackside Treasure
Friday, March 21, 2025
Rapido at 20: Of Tariffs and Trains
Friday, March 14, 2025
VIA and CN in Federal Court - The Facts, Part 3
As I continue to garner (and generate posts here!) more public documents from the Federal Court case, I've been sharing their contents and how they comprised the application for judicial review. Having not been heard, due to CN's motion to strike, the case has been taken to the Quebec Superior Court while Transport Canada (TC) digests CN's submitted grade crossing protection data. On December 10, 2024 Ministerial Order MO 24-01 required CN to supply Transport Canada with information pertaining to approximately 300 crossings within 30 days. CN submitted data pursuant to this order by January 9, 2025. Watch for an upcoming post profiling the Ministerial Order.
The initial "facts" from this Federal Court case has now grown into a series of at least four posts:
- VIA and CN in Federal Court - The Facts, Part 1
- VIA and CN in Federal Court - The Facts, Part 2
- VIA and CN in Federal Court - The Facts, Part 3 (you're reading it!
- CN-VIA Train Service Agreements
In this post, you'll find these gems that I've recently gleaned from the following chronological submissions to the Court:
- Record of the Attorney-General of Canada (AGC) in response to CN
- VIA's response to CN's Motion to Strike
- VIA's application to the Canadian Transportation Agency
- CN's answer to VIA to the Canadian Transportation Agency
The AGC included 291 pages of material in its submission to the Court. An overview of the AGC's position:
VIA'S RESPONSE TO CN'S 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.
On January 31, 2025 VIA's Director, Network Operations & Railway Safety Governance – Railway Operations Nicholas Panetta made an affidavit in VIA's case as part of VIA's response to CN's motion to strike, with the following dates:
- June 2, 2023 VIA applied to CTA
- June 21, 2023 CN proposed VIA sign the ninth amendment to the CN-VIA TSA
- June 23, 2023 VIA wrote to preserve the TSA in a standstill agreement - unsigned by CN.
- June 26, 2023 CN wrote to VIA with revised standstill agreement called CN's Status Quo Agreement - unsigned by CN.
- June 27, 2023 VIA signed and returned the Status Quo Agreement - unsigned by CN.
- CN has a quasi-monopolistic position over VIA. CN's revenue is 38 times higher than VIA's ($15B to $0.4B, respectively).
- Fees that VIA pays to CN are less than 1% of CN's revenue.
- VIA is not one of CN's top 100 customers.
- There is significant friction between VIA and CN in the Corridor.
- There is no set of defined rules for VIA's right to make punctual ad hoc changes such as adding frequencies or operating special trains.
- CN simply refuses all changes with no explanation or justification.
- VIA's proposed TSA would an impose an 'expropriation' of CN's assets for the benefit of VIA passenger service to the detriment of CN's freight service.
- "CN and VIA continue to work collaboratively" i.e. for scheduling and "this process works".
- The CTA should decline to impose VIA's Proposed TSA.
- "Each additional passenger train layers a relatively unchangeable schedule that CN must then accommodate its freight around."
- Passenger trains require Class 5 track, while CN's infrastructure is mostly Class 3, with some portions of Class 4.
- The burden of accommodating VIA services places CN at a competitive disadvantage to CP and other competitors.
- "VIA chooses to run its services almost entirely on CN's infrastructure" and "CN has worn the albatross of accommodating the overwhelming majority of VIA's services."
CN also noted that:
- VIA also has to get approval from Metrolinx to depart Toronto Union Station.
- VIA's own 2022 annual report showing load factor of only 61% the same as September, 2023.
- VIA should not be granted blanket priority over CN freight trains. Shippers might sue, and CN could use $1B annually.
- CN schedules its trains around VIA's train schedules. VIA trains overtake CN trains 20-40 times per day on the Kingston Sub.
- CN disputes Via's ENSCO limited data.
CN also said that VIA's proposals for the TSA are outside its jurisdiction to impose governance provisions therein "that give VIA extensive oversight of and involvement in, CN's own governance and operations".
CN argued against VIA's allegation that CN 'simply refused' all requests, saying it has "delivered presentations in response to VIA's formal requests for changes", and that "VIA wants a seat at the decision-making table...so that it can oversee, monitor and regulate CN...for the benefit of VIA."
CN requested that the CTA impose CN's Proposed TSA for five years.
I'll continue to post submissions to the Federal Court case, now moribund, as they become publicly-available.
Running extra...
This week, NATO's SecGen visited the Oval Office. That mantel looks like it could collapse under the weight of those symmetrical kabenchkes. The fireplace surround has weird gold flourishes on it and even the handles of the fireplace tools are golden, though never used because there's never a fire lit. Once a symbol of class and American soft power, the Oval Office now resembles a cross between a Vegas bathroom and an Egyptian pharaoh's tomb. A cross of crassness and classless. Psychologists say displays of gold are visible symbols of wealth, but subliminally reveal tendencies toward greed and excess. But I mean it, this is a train blog!
Tuesday, March 11, 2025
Pop-Up Post: CN Nos 377, 372, 271, 305 - February 2025
- Too many monster layouts. Their dimensions: 40x52, 13x22, 22x28, 25x35, 19x60. These are thought by the editor to be inspiring, but for many aspiring but house-less layout builders, they may be overwhelmingly unattainable.
- Too much like Great Model Railroads showing completed, post-planning layouts. We need to see more uncompleted benchwork, bare walls, in-progress photos!
- Modelling other layouts: I was able to spot Lance Mindheim's Monon curve and Florida look-alike, Tony Koester Ohio junctions. Modellers see these fine layouts but need to 'go their own way' and not just build what they're seen elsewhere!
- Good news - no car floats, no 'overpasses of death'.