
Via Rail plans to use refurbished cars to improve service between Halifax-Montreal
HALIFAX — Via Rail wants to use refurbished rail cars to improve service between Halifax and Montreal, but the CEO of the Crown corporation can’t say whether doing so will increase the frequency of trains on the line.
Mario Péloquin made the comments in an interview Tuesday after a ceremony celebrating the $27-million restoration of Via’s Halifax station. He also noted that last year was the 120th anniversary of The Ocean — the passenger train from Montreal to Halifax inaugurated in July 1904.
Ottawa has committed to renewing Via Rail’s entire Canadian fleet within ten years. However, in the interim, Péloquin says there are plans to refurbish stainless steel cars that are being retired in Central Canada for use in the Atlantic region. The rail cars, originally manufactured in 1954 by the now-defunct Budd Company of Philadelphia, can be modernized and sent to Halifax as they become available, he said.
“As soon as we free up one of those (Budd rail cars), we’ll repurpose it in the segments of the long-distance runs where we can best benefit from their use,” said the chief executive.