Skip to content

Marten River crash shows why passenger train services are so important, lobby group argues

Issues like those caused by accident on Hwy 11 that left residents between North Bay and Temiskaming Shores stranded must be addressed
241116_fireball
An accident near Marten River on Highway 11 North not only sent a fireball shooting up from the wreck, it forced the closure of the busy road for nearly 24 hours. File photo

A group lobbying for greater rail service for northern Ontario says over a seven week period, motorists encountered a total of 90 closures or blockages due to automobile or weather related incidents in the region.

The Northern and Eastern Ontario Rail Network (NEORN) says on November 24, Highway 11, one of Northern Ontario’s primary roadways, was closed for nearly 24 hours due to a transport truck collision near Tonomo Lake Road, near the community of Marten River.

"Residents along this corridor between North Bay and Temiskaming Shores were left stranded, as the province could not provide a detour or an alternative mode of transportation to circumvent the incident. A week before the Holidays in December, Highway 17 was closed repeatedly over a four day period due to poor weather, blockages or collisions between the communities of Wawa, Sault-Ste-Marie and Blind River."

The Northern & Eastern Ontario Rail Network is a grass roots organization advocating for the retention of existing rail corridors and the reinstatement of passenger train and corresponding shuttle services.

In a news release it says according to the Ministry of Transportation’s Twitter feed, the Trans-Canada highway was shut down on 16 separate occasions.

"Detours were either not an option or simply non-existent.

"These incidents, among others, are a clear demonstration of the gaps that exist within the Northern Ontario transportation network, and the need to reinstate passenger train services in the region. Within the last month, the province introduced weekend GO Train service between Barrie and Toronto, as well as extension of the Richmond Hill GO Train to the Town of Gormley. January 12, 2017.

"Meanwhile in Northern Ontario, families, seniors and students are forced to endure the inevitable consequences from frequent highway closures and the lack of transportation alternatives readily accessible to many Southern Ontarians.

"The province indicates in its latest discussion paper for the Northern Ontario Multimodal Transportation Study (NOMTS) that it wishes to improve long distance, regional and local intercommunity bus services. Yet, the province’s highway infrastructure in Northern Ontario is incapable of, or is far too vulnerable and unreliable to deliver on this recommendation in the event of closures, weather related incidents or natural disasters. It is with irony that the region’s adjacent rail lines, which have proven to be time and again a safe and reliable mode of transportation for people and goods elsewhere in the province and country, remain underutilized or idle along the Northern Ontario Trans-Canada highways corridors.

"The Federal Government refuses to fund and reinstate the Algoma Central passenger rail service, while Queen’s Park resists to the need to revive the Northlander passenger train."


Comments

Verified reader

If you would like to apply to become a verified commenter, please fill out this form.