Friday, May 22, 2026
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Asks Transport Minister To Tackle Greyhound’s Western Pullout

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jul, 2018 01:58 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he has asked Transport Minister Marc Garneau to find solutions following Greyhound's withdrawal of bus service from western Canada.
     
     
    Trudeau says Greyhound's move is "difficult" for people who live in the Prairies and for those who are struggling economically.
     
     
    "I have asked our minister of transport to work with the provinces, to work with communities, to work with the company to try and see what paths forward there are," said Trudeau.
     
     
    Trudeau was responding to questions from reporters on a highway in Sutherlands River, N.S., about whether Ottawa is prepared to offer subsidies to keep the service running or offer an alternative.
     
     
    Greyhound Canada announced last week it is cutting passenger and delivery services in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, northwestern Ontario and rural British Columbia.
     
     
    The decision triggered outrage and apprehension among rural and First Nations communities that rely heavily on the company's service.
     
     
    Indigenous women's advocates have said that Greyhound's decision will put more women at risk.
     
     
    The issue of transportation along a 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.
     
     
    "We of course continue to be extremely concerned by the challenge of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, that's why we launched the national public inquiry into the issue," said Trudeau.
     
     
    "We of course are reflecting on that element of it and looking for how we can contribute to solutions."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Set Up Tip Line To Find Source Of B.C.'s Largest Forest Fire In 2017

    Police Set Up Tip Line To Find Source Of B.C.'s Largest Forest Fire In 2017
    CLINTON, B.C. — RCMP say they're looking for help in finding the source of a human caused wildfire that burned nearly 2,000 square kilometres of forest, brush and buildings in British Columbia last year.

    Police Set Up Tip Line To Find Source Of B.C.'s Largest Forest Fire In 2017

    ICBC In 'Financial Dumpster Fire,' Major Reforms Needed: David Eby

    ICBC In 'Financial Dumpster Fire,' Major Reforms Needed: David Eby
    VANCOUVER — Major reforms are on the way to extinguish a "financial dumpster fire" at British Columbia's public auto insurer, which projects a $1.3-billion net loss this fiscal year, the province's attorney general said Monday.

    ICBC In 'Financial Dumpster Fire,' Major Reforms Needed: David Eby

    Lawyer: Expel 'Dirty Dancing' Foreigners From Cambodia

    Lawyer: Expel 'Dirty Dancing' Foreigners From Cambodia
    Two Canadian women — Eden Kazoleas, 20, and Jessica Drolet, 25 — are among the foreigners detained. Global Affairs Canada said it was providing consular services to the Canadians in Cambodia.

    Lawyer: Expel 'Dirty Dancing' Foreigners From Cambodia

    Lawyers File Class-action Lawsuit For Former Patients At Indian Hospitals

    A statement of claim filed in Toronto says Indigenous patients suffered consistent physical and sexual assaults at the 29 hospitals from 1945 until the last one closed in 1981.

    Lawyers File Class-action Lawsuit For Former Patients At Indian Hospitals

    Air Canada's 787 Dreamliner Non-Stop Vancouver-Delhi Flights Become Year-Round Beginning June 2018

    Air Canada's 787 Dreamliner Non-Stop Vancouver-Delhi Flights Become Year-Round Beginning June 2018
    Customer response to our nonstop Vancouver-Delhi seasonal flights initially launched in 2016 has been extremely positive, and we are very pleased to extend the only flights between Western Canada and India to year-round beginning in June

    Air Canada's 787 Dreamliner Non-Stop Vancouver-Delhi Flights Become Year-Round Beginning June 2018

    Vancouver Renters' Union Forms To Fight Soaring Costs In City's Housing Market

    Vancouver Renters' Union Forms To Fight Soaring Costs In City's Housing Market
    VANCOUVER — Rising rental costs, evictions and a scarcity of units in Vancouver's densely populated West End were among the reasons for Gail Harmer's decision to join a group that is taking a new approach to advocating for the rights and protection of tenants.

    Vancouver Renters' Union Forms To Fight Soaring Costs In City's Housing Market