Waterloo Region Record

Via train stranded in cut-off Churchill

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CHURCHILL, MAN. — Most of the talk since rail service to Churchill in northern Manitoba was indefinite­ly interrupte­d by washouts and other track damage last month has focused on how to get goods and tourists in to the remote Hudson Bay community.

Via Rail has a different problem — how to get one of its trains out.

There are no roads or other rail lines to Churchill and the two locomotive­s and five passenger cars are sitting, silent, at the station.

The track is the only land connection between the outside world and Churchill — a popular tourist destinatio­n famous for its polar bears and beluga whales.

“Options to retrieve that (train) are being evaluated at this time,” Via spokespers­on Mylène Bélanger said.

She wouldn’t say what those options might be. Each of the locomotive­s weighs 107 tonnes.

A part-time maintenanc­e person in Churchill inspects the train and runs it periodical­ly, she added.

Train service has been suspended for weeks due to flooding that rail line owner Denver-based Omnitrax Inc. says has resulted in “unpreceden­ted and catastroph­ic” damage likely to take until next spring to repair.

Omnitrax, which has been losing money on the line and has been trying to sell it, has said it has yet to get on the ground and fully inspect the almost-300 kilometres of remote track.

Chief commercial officer Peter Tousenard said in an emailed statement that Omnitrax, too, has a number of rail cars in limbo in Churchill.

“We understand Via is looking at options to ship their passenger cars and locomotive out by barge through the port, and we are working with them to find a solution that will meet their needs,” Tousenard said.

Bélanger wouldn’t confirm if shipping the train out by barge is under considerat­ion.

François Gaudreau with Nunavut Sea Link Supply-Desgagne Trans-Arctik, which provides shipping services in the region, said the company has ships capable of moving something as large and heavy as locomotive­s. The ships have cranes that could lift the locomotive­s and cars on board.

But Gaudreau said there are numerous other challenges to moving the rail stock. “They would have to be brought alongside our vessel because there’s a certain reach of the cranes,” Gaudreau said. “But it’s possible.”

A ship with his company is scheduled to arrive in Churchill on July 10, he said. There are no plans to load a train.

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