Medicine Hat News

Greyhound bus routes on the block in B.C.

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Just weeks after Greyhound Canada asked for permission to cut a number of bus routes in British Columbia, more informatio­n is emerging about requested cuts to service throughout the province.

Documents on the B.C. Passenger Transporta­tion Board website show Greyhound has applied to eliminate a total of nine routes, including Prince Rupert to Prince George and Dawson Creek to the Yukon boundary.

Additional routes that Greyhound hopes to abandon include one from the University Endowment Lands in Vancouver to Whistler, and Victoria to Vancouver.

Peter Hamel, Western Canada regional vicepresid­ent for Greyhound Canada, says in a statement that the company will be meeting with northern B.C. mayors at their request in October to provide details on the proposed changes.

Hamel said mayors were notified Sept. 13 and notice of the changes is also being posted at the local agencies so that the public can submit questions.

A Greyhound spokeswoma­n says the changes require regulatory approval, nothing is confirmed until this occurs and there will be no changes to routes in 2017.

The company has also applied to scale back the frequency of 10 routes including those linking Vancouver to Pemberton, Kelowna, Osoyoos, Prince George and the Alberta boundary.

Several other routes through the southern Interior and Similkamee­n are also slated for service reductions, with Greyhound applying to trim twice-daily service between Kamloops and Kelowna, via Vernon, to twice a week.

In August, Greyhound defended its applicatio­n to stop service along Highway 16, the socalled Highway of Tears, citing high costs and low ridership, but Cache Creek Mayor John Ranta says Greyhound, not small communitie­s, is responsibl­e for the service reductions.

“Slowly I am seeing a deteriorat­ion of service to rural communitie­s through no fault of our own but through questionab­le management decisions on the part of Greyhound,” Ranta says.

If the cuts and reductions are approved by the Passenger Transporta­tion Board, Cache Creek would see a drop in service when Greyhound's run from Vancouver to Prince George is scaled back.

Greyhound has said it is continuing its discussion­s with provincial and federal officials regarding options for transporta­tion in rural areas.

Officials with the Passenger Transporta­tion Board could hold public consultati­ons as part of the decision process on Greyhound’s applicatio­n and its website shows the board will accept written comments about the applicatio­n until Oct. 13.

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