Deal Reached on Rail Line to Churchill - Finally!

Twin_Moose

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Apr 17, 2017
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Ottawa puts up $117M to restore northern rail line

WINNIPEG - The agreement to restore rail service to the town of Churchill in northern Manitoba will include at least $117 million from the federal government.
The federal funding consists of $74 million to help repair the damaged rail line and buy it, along with the town's port, from Denver-based Omnitrax. Ottawa is also committing another $43 million over 10 years to subsidize operations of the rail line.
"Repair work on the rail line has already begun ... and every effort is being made to complete the work and restore rail service before winter sets in," International Trade Diversification Minister Jim Carr said at a news conference Friday that offered few details on what others involved in the deal are putting up.
The rail line is the only land link to the subarctic community of 900 people, known for its polar bear tourist season and port on the western shore of Hudson Bay.
The line was washed out by flooding in the spring of 2017. Since then, goods and people have had to be flown in and prices for groceries and fuel have skyrocketed.
The tourist economy was hit hard, and some residents left town.
Two weeks ago, after months of negotiations, a consortium called Arctic Gateway Group hammered out a deal to buy the line and port from Omnitrax, which had said it was losing money on the service and could not afford tens of millions of dollars in necessary repairs.
The consortium includes several northern communities, Toronto-based Fairfax Financial Holdings and AGT Food and Ingredients, a Regina-based supplier of pulses and food ingredients.
Carr and consortium officials would not reveal Friday how much money the consortium partners are putting in — they referred to an unspecified pool of money — or how much money Omnitrax is being paid.
Carr would also not say whether the federal government would put up more money if its annual subsidies are not enough to prevent losses.
"You don't talk about hypotheticals in this business."
The rail line was once government-owned, but a former Liberal government sold it to Omnitrax in 1997. The rail line suffered from high maintenance costs due to the vast boggy terrain it covers, and lost a key customer when the Conservative government in 2012 moved to end the Canadian Wheat Board monopoly on western wheat.
Carr said the new ownership group, which includes a built-in customer base with AGT, will make the rail line viable.
Fairfax's president was equally confident the restored line and port has untapped opportunities to ship goods to and from other countries through the Arctic.
"The Russians — we have roughly 50,000 people north of the Arctic circle, they have a million and a half people and I said, 20 per cent of their GDP (goes) through there," Paul Rivett said.
Churchill Mayor Mike Spence said the months that have passed without rail service have been hard on the town. But people from other parts of Canada reached out.
"I had people sending food hampers ... high school students sending cards and school supplies," Spence said. "So we never felt alone."
 

Hoid

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Oct 15, 2017
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They should challenge Tesla to build a high speed line up there.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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H-Piles are dimensionally square structural beams that are driven in the ground for deep foundation applications. Most soils at or near surface do not have the mechanical properties to support large buildings. As you go deeper into the earth's geology, there are layers (bearing strata) capable of doing so.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Gravel pads for what? Heavy equipment?

Do you have any idea how big of an eco-sin it is to not use wooden mats?

Mandatory.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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Gravel pads for what? Heavy equipment?
Do you have any idea how big of an eco-sin it is to not use wooden mats?
Mandatory.
How about slag/spoil from that old Cominco nickel mine in Thompson? ... nice, dense stuff ...
 

Twin_Moose

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Apr 17, 2017
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If they are going to reset railbeds there are big break throughs in Geotech materials that help use the bog/muskeg to support weight through redistributing PSI over greater distances. My understanding is that most of the damage is at water crossings where the crossings are washed out mainly due to Beaver activity. CN use to hire trappers and explosive experts to keep the rodents under control, one of VIA's cut backs on cost saving was to eliminate these positions and just bring in explosive experts on demand and stay within their ROW, trappers with the low pelt prices weren't interested in trapping Beaver aggressively for market price.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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It'll remain a light line by summer and moderately heavy freight by winter.

Do we still have the aluminum grain cars?
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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A pile of new cars are being built as we speak.

I'm getting miffed having to spend $1000 a pop on grain bags.