The Peterborough Examiner

Via Rail line discussion­s ongoing

- JOELLE KOVACH EXAMINER REPORTER joelle.kovach @peterborou­ghdaily.com

Discussion­s are ongoing in Ottawa over a multi-billion-dollar proposal from Via Rail to offer a new passenger train service between Quebec City and Toronto, with a stop in Peterborou­gh.

Federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau recently discussed the high-frequency line project’s next steps with Canada Infrastruc­ture Bank board chair Michael Sabia, according to a new statement from the office of Women and Gender Equality Minister Maryam Monsef.

Monsef, who is also the rural economic developmen­t minister and the Peterborou­gh-Kawartha MP — was not available for comment on Friday, but a statement from her office explains that key players Sabia and Garneau have been in discussion­s.

Sabia is the chair of the Infrastruc­ture Bank, which has invested along with Transport Canada $71.1 million for detailed planning work ahead of a federal cabinet decision on whether to back the project, which is expected to cost $4 billion.

Garneau was tasked in his mandate letter from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to work toward making the new train service a reality.

Part of the detailed studies being undertaken now include determinin­g an exact route and locations for railway stations. Although a rail station for Peterborou­gh is planned, its exact location is yet to be determined.

While the project is expected to use existing corridors and rights-of-way, it’s still unclear whether there may be a railway station in Havelock where rail lines already exist.

Havelock-Belmont-Methuen Mayor Jim Martin could not be reached for comment about it Friday.

A transporta­tion advocacy group said the risks for the project are lower now that Via Rail has focused on existing rail lines, the Canadian Press reported, meaning planning could be done by 2022.

In the meantime consultati­ons with the public and with Indigenous communitie­s are expected soon, wrote Via Rail spokespers­on Karl-Philip Marchand Giguere in an email to The Examiner earlier this week.

He wrote that further details on those consultati­ons will be released when available.

Meanwhile Infrastruc­ture Bank chief investment officer John Casola was quoted in The Globe and Mail this week as saying that “tremendous progress” is being made on developing a route, and he hopes to have “good advice” for the federal government on the project by the end of 2020.

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