Times Colonist

New bus service to fill gap left in northern B.C.

-

An interim long-haul bus service is being started in northern British Columbia by the province as Greyhound reduces and eliminates routes in the region.

B.C. Bus North will start operating on Monday, three days after Greyhound discontinu­es its service on the money-losing routes.

The cuts by Greyhound include routes along the so-called Highway of Tears between Prince George and Prince Rupert; Prince George to Valemont at the Alberta boundary; Dawson Creek to Prince George; and Dawson Creek to Whitehorse. At least 18 women have gone missing or have been murdered along the Highway of Tears, several of them last seen hitchhikin­g.

Cutting the routes put many groups at risk, including Indigenous communitie­s, women and seniors, said Transporta­tion Minister Claire Trevena, adding B.C. Bus North will change that by providing safe, reliable and affordable service.

“People will no longer have to wait at the side of the road in the middle of the night for their bus. B.C. Bus North’s schedules will work for people so they can travel safely from one town to the next,” she said.

The province’s Passenger Transporta­tion Board approved Greyhound’s applicatio­n to cut and reduce the routes after it found demand declined by 46 per cent since 2010. It said the company received no subsidies for the routes and lost $70 million over the last six years.

When the cuts were unveiled, Greyhound vice-president Stuart Kendrick said ridership had dwindled to less than 10 people per trip and the numbers were not sustainabl­e long term.

The province’s new service will include two roundtrips per week between Prince Rupert and Prince George; Prince George and Valemount; and Prince George and Dawson Creek-Fort St. John. It will also offer one roundtrip per week from Fort Nelson to Dawson CreekFort St. John.

B.C. Transit will spend an estimated $2 million on the service, but hopes to offset the cost with fares, said Erinn Pinkerton, interim president and CEO of the transit corporatio­n.

A one-way ticket will cost either $35 or $45, depending how far people are travelling. Customers will need to pre-book and prepay for their trips, either online or through a call-in centre.

The one-year project marks the first time B.C. Transit has run a long-haul service and Pinkerton said changes to fares and routes could be made once data are available about ridership and costs. “We’re willing to make changes and improvemen­ts as we get going,” Pinkerton said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada