A large boulder resulted in some extra maintenance for Summerland's Kettle Valley Steam Railway earlier this year, but also resulted in some unbudgeted rock work that is depleting the railways projects reserves.
Image Credit: Kettle Valley Steam Railway
March 31, 2016 - 2:31 PM
PENTICTON - Summerland’s Kettle Valley Steam Railway has begun the 2016 season, and is safely carrying passengers following a rockslide in February damaged some infrastructure.
General Manager Ken Orford says the railway’s tracks took a direct hit from a boulder slide on February 17, resulting in some broken rails and ties.
A Kamloops contractor was hired to remove the rock, break it up and haul it away, and the tourist railroad’s staff were able to replace the rails and ties without much difficulty or cost.
It was back to business as usual this past Easter weekend, when trains ran to capacity.
Orford, who worked for CN Rail for years, says an incident of this type is typical in the railway business, and in itself, wasn’t a big deal.
Dealing with the rock itself, however, is another matter.
“The cost of getting the rock removed was $15,000. As a result of the slide, we’ve had to hire a geotech, a geologist from Vancouver, to assess the rock cuts at a cost of $3,200, and now we have rock scaling that needs to be done, at an estimated cost of $30,000,” Orford says.
The steam railway launched a fundraising campaign on March 19 that can be accessed on the railway’s website.
Orford says the money needed to perform the rock scaling is coming from other projects the railway had planned to do, that will still need to be done at some point.
“The wheels on the 3716 (engine) need turning, at an estimated cost of $180,000, something we’ll be looking at right after Christmas,” he says, adding any money donated will be earmarked towards these projects.
To contact the reporter for this story, email Steve Arstad at sarstad@infonews.ca or call 250-488-3065. To contact the editor, email mjones@infonews.ca or call 250-718-2724.
News from © iNFOnews, 2016