Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Greyhound Canada To End Routes In Prairies, B.C., Leaving Small Towns In Lurch

The Canadian Press, 09 Jul, 2018 12:38 PM
    OTTAWA — Greyhound Canada says it is ending its passenger bus and freight services in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, and cancelling all but one route in B.C. — a U.S.-run service between Vancouver and Seattle.
     
     
    As a result, when the changes take effect at the end of October, Ontario and Quebec will be the only regions where the familiar running-dog logo continues to grace Canadian highways.
     
     
    "This decision is regretful and we sympathize with the fact that many small towns are going to lose service," Greyhound Canada senior vice-president Stuart Kendrick said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
     
     
    "But simply put, the issue that we have seen is the routes in rural parts of Canada — specifically Western Canada — are just not sustainable anymore."
     
     
    Kendrick said 415 people will be out of work as a result of the decision, which he estimates will impact roughly two million consumers.
     
     
    The company is blaming a 41 per cent decline in ridership since 2010, persistent competition from subsidized national and inter-regional passenger transportation services, the growth of new low-cost airlines, regulatory constraints and the continued growth of car ownership.
     
     
    Declining ridership is the primary culprit, said Kendrick, who called the combination of declining ridership and increasing costs an "ongoing spiral" that's making it impossible for the company to continue operations.
     
     
    He said the company has raised its concerns with provincial and federal officials over the years and wanted to ensure both levels of government were "fully aware" of the situation. Greyhound Canada has long advocated for a community funding model to allow any private carrier to bid on essential rural services, he added.
     
     
    Kendrick said Greyhound Canada will continue to push Ottawa to look at improving transport in northern communities.
     
     
    "There was a commitment to look at our issue, they're well aware of it. It shouldn't come as a surprise that we've had problems but there was no funding commitment at that time," he said.
     
     
    "The company has experienced significant losses despite continued efforts to return to viability. In the affected regions, the company has run an operating deficit since 2004. We have had substantial losses over several years as a direct result of declining ridership."
     
     
    All Greyhound routes in Ontario and Quebec will continue to operate except for one: the Trans-Canada, which links a number of smaller communities between Winnipeg and Sudbury, Ont.
     
     
    Kendrick said the decision will leave most of the affected communities with no other transportation options.
     
     
    Greyhound Canada applied to provincial regulators last year to discontinue routes in northern B.C., including between Prince George to Prince Rupert, citing the problem of declining ridership. Those cancellations took effect June 1.
     
     
    The issue of transportation along that route, which includes the notorious stretch of B.C.'s Highway 16 known as the Highway of Tears, was a major point of contention last fall during hearings at the national inquiry for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, where a number of women have gone missing.
     
     
    The latest cancellations are scheduled to take effect Oct. 31.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Halifax Bus Mechanic Faced Racist, Bullying Workplace: Human Rights Commission

    Halifax Bus Mechanic Faced Racist, Bullying Workplace: Human Rights Commission
    A Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission board of inquiry has found a bus mechanic married to an African Nova Scotian woman was subjected to a poisonous work environment riddled with unchecked racial discrimination and harassment.

    Halifax Bus Mechanic Faced Racist, Bullying Workplace: Human Rights Commission

    Man Charged With Murder In Deaths Of Two Women In Whitehorse: RCMP

    Man Charged With Murder In Deaths Of Two Women In Whitehorse: RCMP
    Police have charged a man with murder in the deaths of two women whose bodies were found at a home in Whitehorse more than a year ago.

    Man Charged With Murder In Deaths Of Two Women In Whitehorse: RCMP

    B.C. Man Sentenced To 10 Months In Jail For Hit-and-run That Killed Teen Jennifer Gatey

    B.C. Man Sentenced To 10 Months In Jail For Hit-and-run That Killed Teen Jennifer Gatey
     A man who pleaded guilty to failing to remain at the scene of an accident that killed a 16-year-old girl in Kamloops, B.C., has been sentenced to 10 months in jail.

    B.C. Man Sentenced To 10 Months In Jail For Hit-and-run That Killed Teen Jennifer Gatey

    Pregnant Okanagan Teacher TAYAH LLOYD Identified As Victim In Fatal Highway 1 Crash

    Pregnant Okanagan Teacher TAYAH LLOYD Identified As Victim In Fatal Highway 1 Crash
    A team of specialists has been sent to an elementary school in Kelowna, B.C, to help students and staff deal with the death of a teacher.

    Pregnant Okanagan Teacher TAYAH LLOYD Identified As Victim In Fatal Highway 1 Crash

    Two B.C. Men Vanish On Vancouver Island Days After Sailing North From Panama

    Two B.C. Men Vanish On Vancouver Island Days After Sailing North From Panama
    UCLUELET, B.C. — A search is underway on Vancouver Island for two British Columbia men who have not been seen for almost a week.

    Two B.C. Men Vanish On Vancouver Island Days After Sailing North From Panama

    Surrey RCMP Arrest Six, Seize Three Cars, Cash, Drugs In Bust Linked To Gang War

    Surrey RCMP Arrest Six, Seize Three Cars, Cash, Drugs In Bust Linked To Gang War
    After a lengthy investigation the Surrey RCMP Drug Section, with assistance from the Surrey Gang Enforcement Team, executed three search warrants simultaneously on three separate residences in Surrey on May 23, 2018.

    Surrey RCMP Arrest Six, Seize Three Cars, Cash, Drugs In Bust Linked To Gang War