Sunday, March 29, 2026
ADVT 
National

Greyhound Canada permanently cuts all bus routes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2021 10:50 AM
  • Greyhound Canada permanently cuts all bus routes

Greyhound Canada is permanently cutting all bus routes across the country, shutting down the intercity bus carrier’s operations in Canada after nearly a century of service. 

The motor coach company said its remaining routes in Ontario and Quebec will cease permanently on Thursday. 

Its American affiliate, Greyhound Lines, Inc., will continue to operate cross-border routes to Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver once the border reopens. 

The decision comes a year after Greyhound Canada temporarily suspended all service due to a sharp decline in passengers and mounting travel restrictions amid the first wave of COVID-19. 

The bus carrier has struggled for years with declining ridership, increasing competition and deregulation.

 But the complete loss of so-called farebox revenue during the pandemic has forced the company to permanently cease operations, said Greyhound Canada senior vice-president Stuart Kendrick. 

“It's been a very tough decision and one we've taken with a heavy heart,” he told The Canadian Press in an interview. “It's been a lifeline for many Canadians for more than 90 years. This will have a massive impact.”

 The decision is a blow to rural and remote areas that rely on a patchwork of private intercity bus companies for transportation. 

The service has long been part of a network linking smaller communities and big cities, offering an affordable and convenient mode of travel for everyone from essential workers and students to the elderly and backpackers.

Yet the rise in car ownership, ride sharing, discount airlines and urban migration hasslowly eroded bus ridership, leading Greyhound Canada to gradually reduce the frequency of some services and cut other routes altogether.

 "Private carriers are relying on the farebox revenue to maintain these rural routes," Kendrick said. "When ridership declines, we have a decision to make. We either cut the frequency, exit the rural markets or look for some help."

 Citing declining ridership, deregulation and subsidized competition, Greyhound Canada suspended all operations in Western Canada in 2018.

 Yet despite the ongoing challenges with its remaining routes, nothing could have prepared the company for the dramatic 95 per cent drop in passengers at the outset of the pandemic, Kendrick said. 

Multiple coach bus companies teamed up and approached the federal and provincial governments for financial aid amid mounting COVID-19 restrictions. But Kendrick said they were referred to existing pandemic supports — what he called “negligible” for the beleaguered passenger transportation industry — prompting Greyhound Canada to temporarily suspend all service last May.

 “There’s really been a lack of support," Kendrick said. “We don’t get subsidies."

 Intercity bus carriers are also competing with publicly funded train and transit systems, he said, putting private companies at a disadvantage. 

The Ontario government has also promised to deregulate the intercommunity bus industry starting in July, a move that would end Greyhound Canada’s control of certain routes. 

“We have had exclusive private bus service on certain corridors,” he said, noting that it provided passengers with safe, frequent and affordable service. 

"Greyhound Canada's tough decision today is going to have a massive impact on customers, especially those riding in the rural network."

 About 260 employees were laid off after Greyhound Canada temporarily ended its passenger service last May. An additional 45 employees will be laid off as a result of the permanent closure, Kendrick said. 

The company plans to sell the bus stations it owns, he said. As for its leased properties, some of the agreements have expired or have an “out clause,” while it will honour the terms of leases it's obliged to continue paying, Kendrick said.

The company said tickets for travel after Thursday will be refunded. Customers with a valid travel voucher can also request a refund. 

All Ontario and Quebec routes that were temporarily suspended in May 2020 will permanently end as of midnight on Thursday. The routes are:

 

- Toronto-Ottawa-Montreal

 

- Toronto-London-Windsor

 

- Sudbury-Ottawa/Toronto

 

- Toronto-Kitchener/Guelph/Cambridge

 

- Toronto-Niagara Falls

 

- Ottawa-Kingston

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Liberals to table federal budget April 19

Liberals to table federal budget April 19
It will also be Freeland’s first budget as finance minister; she took on the portfolio last summer following Bill Morneau’s resignation.

Liberals to table federal budget April 19

Police seek witnesses in hit and run investigation

Police seek witnesses in hit and run investigation
The suspect vehicle is described as a dark coloured hatchback and the driver is described as a South Asian man in his 20s, with a beard.

Police seek witnesses in hit and run investigation

Health Canada to add warning on AstraZeneca

Health Canada to add warning on AstraZeneca
The department's chief medical adviser Dr. Supriya Sharma says the warning comes on the heels of a similar warning in Europe last week but doesn't change Health Canada's analysis that the vaccine's benefits outweigh its risks.

Health Canada to add warning on AstraZeneca

E-scooters get green light in B.C. pilot study

E-scooters get green light in B.C. pilot study
The six participating municipalities where e-scooters will soon be legal are Kelowna, Vernon, Vancouver, West Vancouver and North Vancouver city and district.

E-scooters get green light in B.C. pilot study

Urgent need for waste management in North: report

Urgent need for waste management in North: report
The marine conservation group says northern communities produce a similar level of waste to cities in the south, but have fewer ways to deal with it.

Urgent need for waste management in North: report

Advocates fear jails filling again during pandemic

Advocates fear jails filling again during pandemic
About a year after the first COVID-19 cases emerged in Ontario jails, the update by the Prison Pandemic Partnership says the risk to inmates increases when there is less space.

Advocates fear jails filling again during pandemic