
Published: December 15th 2009
Source: CBC
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Metrolinx, the provincial Crown
corporation responsible for the Toronto-area commuter rail system,
has bought a rail line from railway giant CN for $68 million.
Metrolinx said Tuesday it had acquired the lower portion of the
Newmarket rail subdivision in central-north Toronto from
Montreal-based CN, Canada's largest rail company.
The transaction gives Metrolinx full ownership of the
96-kilometre-long Barrie-Bradford GO Train corridor between downtown
Toronto and Barrie, Ont., the provincial transit agency said in a
release.
Go Transit, the operating division of Metrolinx, provides commuter
rail and bus services in the Toronto area of southern Ontario.
"This transaction marks a milestone for the agency, giving us — for
the first time — end-to-end ownership of a GO Transit rail line,"
said Metrolinx president and chief executive Robert Prichard, a past
president and chief executive of Torstar Corp., owner of the Toronto
Star newspaper and other publishing and media properties.
"This transaction with CN — an important partner of ours — will
permit improvements to service between Toronto and Barrie and points
in-between. Improved commuter rail and mass transit are vital to
easing traffic congestion and air pollution in the [Toronto area]
while improving the productivity and economic competitiveness of the
region," Prichard said.
Claude Mongeau, CN's executive vice-president and incoming president
and CEO, said the transaction generates value for the company.
"CN is pleased to have reached this sales agreement with Metrolinx.
We have close ties with GO — most of its services in the Greater
Toronto Area operate over CN's network — and we see our partnership
with GO and Metrolinx continuing to drive the environmental benefits
of rail in the Toronto region."
Under its sales agreement with Metrolinx, CN will continue to serve
five freight customers on the lower Newmarket subdivision rail line
between Highway 401 and CN's main east-west freight corridor.

