Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Documents show federal push for infrastructure bank to back Via project

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jun, 2019 05:50 PM

    Federal officials are pushing the Canadian Infrastructure Bank to back Via Rail's high-frequency rail project.

    The government's response to a written question from New Democrat Robert Aubin details the eight times between October and December 2018 that officials from the Finance Department met with the federal agency to make the business case on Via's behalf.

    The rail company wants to build a multibillion-dollar new network of dedicated passenger-rail lines in Ontario and Quebec, so its trains would no longer have to yield to freight trains on borrowed tracks.

    The Finance Department told Aubin that a range of public-private models are still being assessed "with varying degrees of private sector investment."

    Options include having a private partner help with designing and building the new lines, or a broader deal that would include financing, operating and maintenance agreements.

    The Liberals created the infrastructure agency in 2017, hoping to use $35 billion in federal funding to pry three to four times that from the private sector to pay for new infrastructure projects that are in the public interest.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Human Rights Tribunal Rules Anti-Transgender Poster Campaign Discriminatory

    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver trans woman who made a human rights complaint about a poster campaign that called transgenderism an "impossibility" has won her case.

    B.C. Human Rights Tribunal Rules Anti-Transgender Poster Campaign Discriminatory

    Nothing Could Be Done To Stop Emaciated Grizzly That Killed Mom, Baby: Coroner

    Nothing Could Be Done To Stop Emaciated Grizzly That Killed Mom, Baby: Coroner
    The service has released the results of its investigation into the deaths of 37-year-old Valerie Theoret and her baby Adele Roesholt outside their cabin near Einarson Lake on Nov. 26.

    Nothing Could Be Done To Stop Emaciated Grizzly That Killed Mom, Baby: Coroner

    OD Prevention Sites Possible At Canada'S Prisons: Correctional Service

    OD Prevention Sites Possible At Canada'S Prisons: Correctional Service
    VANCOUVER — Canada's prisoner service is considering opening overdose prevention sites as it expands a needle-exchange program that is now offered at a fifth institution for offenders who inject smuggled drugs.

    OD Prevention Sites Possible At Canada'S Prisons: Correctional Service

    Supreme Court Stresses Jail Should Be 'The Exception' For People Awaiting Trial

    Supreme Court Stresses Jail Should Be 'The Exception' For People Awaiting Trial
    The Supreme Court of Canada says making an accused person wait in jail before trial should be the exception, not the rule, in a decision that affirms a key legal safeguard intended to ensure speedy justice.

    Supreme Court Stresses Jail Should Be 'The Exception' For People Awaiting Trial

    Quebec Teachers, Religious Groups Denounce Government's Secularism Bill

    Advocacy organizations and citizens are denouncing the Quebec government's secularism legislation, saying it turns religious minorities into second-class citizens.

    Quebec Teachers, Religious Groups Denounce Government's Secularism Bill

    Quebec Bill Prohibits Religious Symbols For Teachers, Other Public Sector Workers

    Quebec Bill Prohibits Religious Symbols For Teachers, Other Public Sector Workers
    QUEBEC — The Quebec government tabled legislation Thursday to prohibit public sector employees in positions of authority from wearing religious symbols at work.

    Quebec Bill Prohibits Religious Symbols For Teachers, Other Public Sector Workers