Sections of the Kelowna Pacific Railway are reopening and that's good news for companies that depend on the transportation corridor.
(CHARLOTTE HELSTON / iNFOnews.ca)
September 27, 2013 - 7:17 AM
VERNON — There’s new movement on the Kelowna Pacific Railway as Canadian National Railway will start freight service on 75 per cent of the KPR rail network.
CN will resume operations on 97 miles of track running from Campbell Creek, B.C., located approximately 10 miles east of Kamloops, to Vernon, Lumby junction and Lumby, B.C. CN will discontinue track operated between Lumby junction and Kelowna, B.C., because of insufficient freight traffic. The 60-day discontinuance process under the Canada Transportation Act will start later this week.
“I’m pleased to say that the parties were able to come together to assemble the right business and labour conditions to justify the resumption of rail traffic on the major portion of the KPR as well as a sizeable capital investment required to protect rail service in the region,” Jim Vena, CN executive vice-president said. “We are targeting the resumption of operations as soon as we can ensure the track is brought back to a standard to ensure safe train operations.”
KPR, which leased its network from CN in 1999, entered receivership on July 5, 2013, and halted operations. CN this week reached mutually satisfactory agreements with the line’s trustee to take it out of the bankruptcy process, Tolko Industries Ltd., the main customer on the line, and the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC) and TCRC-Maintenance of Way Employees Division (TCRC-MWED). The TCRC and TCRC-MWED represent approximately 35 locomotive engineers, conductors and track maintenance workers employed by the insolvent B.C. short-line railway.
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News from © iNFOnews, 2013