Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

NDP Wants Transport Minister To Spell Out Plan To Replace Greyhound Service

The Canadian Press, 20 Jul, 2018 02:09 PM
    OTTAWA — The opposition New Democrats are calling on the Trudeau government to lay out its plan to help communities that will be affected by the shutdown of Greyhound bus services in western Canada.
     
     
    The NDP has requested an emergency meeting of the House of Commons standing committee on transport, infrastructure and communities, hoping that Transport Minister Marc Garneau will spell out the options he's looking at to ensure people in those communities who rely on bus services are still able to travel.
     
     
    The call comes a week after NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh urged the prime minister to develop a funding plan to prevent Greyhound from shutting down crucial routes, calling it a public safety issue.
     
     
    The bus company announced earlier this month that it's cutting passenger and delivery services in the Prairies, northwestern Ontario and all but one cross-border route in British Columbia.
     
     
    The shutdown is just the latest in a string of service reductions by Greyhound as it deals with declining ridership.
     
     
    The company has said persistent competition from subsidized national and inter-regional passenger transportation services, new low-cost airlines, regulatory constraints and the continued growth of car ownership have resulted in a 41-per-cent decline in its customer base since 2010.
     
     
    In a letter dated Monday to Judy Sgro, the Liberal chair of the standing committee, Quebec New Democrat MP Robert Aubin says Transport Canada has a responsibility to aid communities that will become isolated once Greyhound halts its services.
     
     
    "As a member of the committee, it is my hope that minister Garneau will present to the committee the possible solutions he is working on to ensure that each of the affected communities has access to transportation services that are worthy of Canada in the 21st century," says the letter, made public Thursday.
     
     
    "The committee could pass a motion asking minister Garneau and his officials to testify publicly about their work on this file."
     
     
    Greyhound's decision has sparked outrage in rural and First Nations communities that rely heavily on the company to get around and to ship parcels, and it has raised concerns that a lack of bus service would force vulnerable people to use less safe modes of transportation.
     
     
    On Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he had asked Garneau to find solutions to the Greyhound move, calling the news "difficult."
     
     
    A spokeswoman for the minister would not say what options might be considered, but said the government was "encouraged" by expressions of interest from other bus firms in filling some of the potential service gaps left by Greyhound, using different business models and equipment.
     
     
    In his letter to Sgro, Aubin hinted that improved rail service could play a role in providing transportation services to isolated communities, and that federal money would be needed regardless of the solution that might be adopted.
     
     
    "Whether the solution to the problem involves improving the integration of transport systems or developing a national railway transportation strategy or any other strategy, it is vital that a funding plan be implemented to ensure that Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, northwestern Ontario and rural British Columbia are not deprived of this service," he wrote.
     
     
    A spokesman for Sgro said that interest among committee members in holding an emergency meeting was being monitored, and that while intercity busing falls under provincial jurisdiction, Garneau was already reaching out to his provincial counterparts affected by the Greyhound decision "to see what paths forward exist."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Coroner Issues Warning As Swimmer Dies, Boater Missing This Week In B.C. Waters

    Coroner Issues Warning As Swimmer Dies, Boater Missing This Week In B.C. Waters
    The BC Coroner's Service has issued a warning about water safety as the drowning toll reaches five in the province this month.

    Coroner Issues Warning As Swimmer Dies, Boater Missing This Week In B.C. Waters

    Shopify To Provide E-commerce Platform For Online B.C. Cannabis Sales

    Shopify To Provide E-commerce Platform For Online B.C. Cannabis Sales
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia has selected Shopify Inc. to provide an e-commerce platform for the online sale of non-medical cannabis in the province.

    Shopify To Provide E-commerce Platform For Online B.C. Cannabis Sales

    Cannabis Dispensaries Get Real Oct. 17, 2018; Municipal Leaders Can't Wait

    Cannabis Dispensaries Get Real Oct. 17, 2018; Municipal Leaders Can't Wait
    VICTORIA — On the day Canadians can legally buy and use recreational marijuana, the clock will start ticking for cannabis dispensaries already open across the country, say politicians and pot industry insiders.

    Cannabis Dispensaries Get Real Oct. 17, 2018; Municipal Leaders Can't Wait

    Charges Possible Against A Burnaby RCMP Officer After Robbery Suspect Shot: B.C. Police Watchdog

    British Columbia's police watchdog has sent a report to the provincial prosecution service for consideration of charges against a Burnaby RCMP officer.

    Charges Possible Against A Burnaby RCMP Officer After Robbery Suspect Shot: B.C. Police Watchdog

    Real Police Say Fake Police Weren't Actually Involved In Scam Of Vancouver Woman

    Real Police Say Fake Police Weren't Actually Involved In Scam Of Vancouver Woman
    Police now say that the woman was never physically approached by people claiming to be officers, but detectives have confirmed she was scammed out of $6,000.

    Real Police Say Fake Police Weren't Actually Involved In Scam Of Vancouver Woman

    Four-Term Councillor TOM GILL Is Surrey First's Pick For Mayor

    Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner has made a big announced today. The City's four-term councillor Tom Gill has been chosen as Surrey First’s mayoral candidate for the Oct. 20 municipal election.

    Four-Term Councillor TOM GILL Is Surrey First's Pick For Mayor