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| The Interurban Railway Line once carried
passengers
from Chilliwack to New Westminster, and advocates for improved public transit say it could again. |
Published: July 7th 2009
Source: By Brian Lewis, The Province
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Advocates for establishing a
light-rail passenger service in the Fraser Valley have found an ally
in B.C. Hydro.
And, not surprisingly, they've also found an opponent in mighty
Canadian Pacific Ltd., the railway-based corporation that many have
loved to hate throughout its century-plus history.
In fact, it's the ever-present power of Canadian Pacific that led
Langley Township Mayor Rick Green to issue a media release yesterday
that he hopes will stop CP in its tracks.
The release announced that Langley has a letter from Hydro stating
that the utility will continue to protect its historical rights to
run passenger-rail service on a section of railway line it sold to
CP years ago.
Known as the Pratt-Livingston Corridor, the track runs from 232nd
Street, near Trinity Western University, through the downtown cores
of the township and Langley City, then west to Cloverdale.
This line was sold by B.C. Hydro to CP in the late 1980s for its
coal and container-train service to Deltaport.
But Hydro's retained passenger-service rights reflect its historical
roots in the early 1900s, when its private-sector predecessor, B.C.
Electric, owned and operated its extensive, electrified interurban
tram service between Vancouver and Chilliwack.
Obviously, when the B.C. government of the day decided that Hydro
should exit the railway business, some bureaucrat had enough sense
to protect the public interest in case the call for public rail
transit in the Valley returned.
And it did. Public pressure is mounting on provincial and federal
politicians to re-establish light-rail transit in the region as an
environmentally friendly alternative to motor vehicles.
However, the 21-year-old agreement between Hydro and CP, which
protected those passenger rights, only became public knowledge last
April.
The rights will expire on Aug. 29, unless they're renewed at the
option of either party.
According to several sources, even some of the executives at CP
didn't know Hydro had retained its rights to public rail service.
Nor, I'm told, were they amused.
"I have no doubt that this agreement is CP's worst nightmare," Green
said yesterday.
Not only does CP have to set aside up to one-third of its wheelage
(traffic) for public light-rail use, it also has to do it for free.
By contrast, CP makes millions of dollars annually by allowing
TransLink to operate the West Coast Express on its northern line
into Vancouver.
Now, according to the grapevine, CP is lobbying the Gordon Campbell
government to block Hydro's intention of exercising its legal option
of renewing the agreement that will protect public use of the line
for another 21 years.
This worries Green and other mayors south of the Fraser who fear the
B.C. Liberals may cave into pressure from CP and order Hydro to back
off.
For its part, CP said yesterday it's still reviewing the agreement
and had no further comment.
But Hydro said yesterday it has sent a letter to CP, saying it will
exercise its option and renew the agreement. So far, so good.


