Tag: Frontenac Arch

  • Transport Action Canada

    The Voice ALTO Has Already Heard From

    Transport Action Canada and Transport Action Ontario — the country’s principal pro-rail civil-society voice — have made detailed substantive recommendations about ALTO. What they asked for. What the record shows ALTO has so far addressed. What their voice contributes that nothing else in the public record does.

    ⚠ Documents Under Analysis

    On March 16, 2026, Transport Action Canada and Transport Action Ontario submitted an 18-recommendation written response to ALTO at the close of the January–March 2026 consultation period. The organizations also published an open letter setting out what they believe the substantive questions about the project are, and what credible alternatives have been studied previously.

    They are explicitly pro-rail. They are not opposed to high-speed rail in principle. Their concerns are technical, financial, and service-continuity concerns, and they are asking for the same documents and analyses that Parliament’s own Transport Committee asked for in September 2024 — and that have not been produced.

    Critical Finding

    The questions about ALTO’s cost, ridership, document release, and VIA-service impact are not coming only from project-affected landowners, from anti-rail critics, or from research initiatives. They are coming from the country’s principal pro-rail civil-society voice, in March 2026, on the public record, having formally engaged with ALTO through ALTO’s own consultation process.

    The brief sets out what Transport Action asked for, what the record shows ALTO has addressed, and what credible alternatives they have publicly identified.

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    The Voice ALTO Has Already Heard From — Full Brief (PDF)
    What Transport Action Canada and Transport Action Ontario asked of ALTO, what ALTO has addressed, and what their voice contributes to the public record
    Download PDF
    The Witness

    Who Transport Action is

    Transport Action Canada describes itself as “Canada’s citizen advocacy organization for public transportation,” with members who have “discussed and debated the subject over the past five decades, including of course High Speed Rail and possible alternatives.” It and its provincial affiliates — including Transport Action Ontario, jointly authoring the consultation letter analysed here — are the principal national civil-society voice on Canadian intercity rail policy.

    Their position on ALTO is unambiguous. The open letter opens by welcoming “serious discussion of all options to improve passenger rail.” The consultation letter opens by describing the organizations as “a knowledgeable, passenger-focussed NGO that is very supportive of intercity passenger rail.” They explicitly recognize the underlying problem ALTO is intended to address — that VIA Rail’s constrained access to CN’s Kingston Subdivision “has long been recognized as untenable, which prompted the development and launch of VIA’s High Frequency Rail proposal in 2015.”

    They acknowledge the limits of incremental improvement: “just improving the CN route in isolation while continuing to operate alongside freight would not come close to the quintupling of capacity and slashing of travel times possible with some kind of dedicated track.” They are, in plain terms, an organization that wants more passenger rail in Canada and is substantively critical of how this particular HSR project is being delivered.

    What They Asked For

    The March 2026 consultation response

    Transport Action’s March 16, 2026 letter to ALTO’s Government and Stakeholder Relations office contains eighteen specific recommendations across seven sections. The four recommendations that most directly overlap with the existing CRI evidence base are set out below.

    Recommendation 1
    On the business case and cost
    What Transport Action asked

    “There is considerable skepticism from the public and stakeholders about the business case for HSR… It is urgent that a detailed Business Case be completed as soon as possible, including preferred corridor, capital cost, detailed ridership, fares, revenue and methods of calculation.”

    Mapped onto the parliamentary record

    This is, in substance, the same request as Recommendation 4 of TRAN Report 18 (September 2024), which asked the Minister to require an HFR-versus-HSR cost analysis within six months. As CRI’s brief The Report That Vanished documents, that analysis was never produced. Transport Action is asking, eighteen months later, for the same kind of cost-and-business-case work.

    Recommendation 2
    On ridership transparency
    What Transport Action asked

    “No details are provided on the ridership model, population assumptions, network assumptions, demand per segment, fares, cost of gasoline etc. Although the ridership assumption may be reasonable when lifted from European ridership, there is skepticism that this would be replicated in central Canada, due to lower fuel prices, absence of road tolls etc.”

    Mapped onto the parliamentary record

    This maps directly onto Claim 3 in Reading the Answer — the government’s 43-million-by-2084 ridership figure in Q-923. Transport Action specifically raises the central-Canadian fuel-price and road-toll conditions that distinguish the corridor from the European benchmarks, and quantifies the Ontario provincial subsidy to personal car use at $2.5 billion per year as a “politically tilted playing field” that any credible ridership model must account for.

    Recommendation 3
    On document release
    What Transport Action asked

    “We urge you to release a full unredacted version of the JPO report, plus any other reports that were in the ‘data room’ made available to the three bidders. At this time, with the tender process completed, there should be nothing in these reports that is business-confidential.”

    Mapped onto the parliamentary record

    This is — almost word for word — the same request as Recommendation 6 of TRAN Report 18. Transport Action makes an additional point that the procurement-completion rationale for non-disclosure no longer applies: with the bidder data-room phase concluded, there is no remaining commercial confidentiality argument. The reports have still not been released.

    Recommendation 6
    On the future of VIA service
    What Transport Action asked

    “Recent media reports from Kingston regarding possible diminution of current VIA Rail services when ALTO is operational must be heeded… It is important that ALTO and VIA Rail jointly issue a statement promptly about plans for services at these cities. Otherwise, local elected officials and residents will continue to impede ALTO’s progress.

    Mapped onto the parliamentary record

    This maps directly onto Recommendations 8 and 10 of TRAN Report 18 — the VIA-impact analysis and the no-service-reduction commitment, both unanswered since September 2024. The Senate TRCM raised the same concern in February 2026. The question has now been asked across two parliamentary chambers and one substantial stakeholder consultation submission; it has not been substantively answered.

    Transport Action’s remaining fourteen recommendations cover downtown and shoulder station design, affordable fares, intercommunity bus access for towns currently outside the rail network, emergency-management cooperation with rural fire and EMS, wildlife crossings, sufficient road and trail bridges, recognition of Ontario’s 1834 Drainage Act, First Nations contingency planning for archaeological discovery, sensitive-agricultural-use mapping (sugar bushes, vineyards, certified organic land), and compensation frameworks for intensive agricultural operations that would need to be relocated. Several bear directly on issues documented in CRI’s Five Hundred Farms brief.

    Three Alternatives They Identified

    What pro-rail technical analysis says is possible

    A question CRI has not previously had answered by a technically literate pro-rail body: were credible alternatives to ALTO actually studied, and what did the studies show? Transport Action’s open letter identifies three.

    01

    Targeted CN-route improvements

    “Further investments to improve passenger and freight fluidity, like the third track between Belleville and Napanee and station improvements… would make a big difference to reliability at modest cost.”

    Transport Action concedes this alone is insufficient to deliver the “quintupling of capacity and slashing of travel times” possible with a dedicated track — but lays out a complementary package of known modest cost.

    02

    The freight grand bargain

    “Moves most CN freight over to the CPKC route through Perth… The existing CN route could then be upgraded to support more passenger services at up to 170 km/h, with travel times of around 4 hours between Toronto and Montreal or Ottawa.”

    This is the High Performance Rail framework substantially as CRI has documented it, here independently advocated by Transport Action as a technically credible option.

    03

    HFR on the original Havelock alignment

    “A dedicated track that takes a more direct route between Toronto and Ottawa, with the advantage of reconnecting Peterborough to the railway network, was VIA Rail’s preferred option, while also preserving service on the existing route through Kingston.”

    This is the project the Joint Project Office was funded in 2017 to study, the project the Transport Committee studied in 2023–24, and the project the federal government redesignated in late 2024.

    Why earlier HSR-along-the-lakeshore studies did not proceed

    Of independent technical interest is Transport Action’s observation about why HSR following the Lake Ontario lakeshore has been studied multiple times without proceeding:

    High Speed Rail following a lakeshore from Toronto through Kingston has also been studied before, more than once, by both the federal and provincial governments, without proceeding. For safety reasons, and to achieve 7 km+ minimum radii for higher speeds, such a dedicated track could not be placed too close to the existing alignment nor right alongside Highway 401. It would thus require significant expropriation, and the number of homes and businesses close to CN’s tracks and the 401 has only grown since the last such study in 2011. The chances are that communities like Port Hope and Trenton would be bypassed entirely, and route from Kingston to Ottawa would also then also go through the same sensitive Frontenac Arch region and many of the communities expressing most concern about Alto’s southern study corridor.

    Transport Action Canada, open letter on ALTO HSR route options in eastern Ontario. read the letter

    This is the route-geometry argument set out by a pro-rail body with the technical standing to make it — the same observation about HSR’s 7-km curve-radius requirement that CRI’s engineering research has documented, here presented as a published critique by an established advocacy organization.

    What Their Voice Contributes

    A fifth source category, otherwise absent

    The Citizen Research Initiative’s briefs to date have drawn on four categories of source. Each has its own evidentiary weight; each has its own limitations. Transport Action contributes a fifth that has been substantively absent until now.

    Parliamentary record

    Order Paper questions, Transport Committee reports, Senate committee testimony, the High-Speed Rail Network Act. Authoritative but procedurally bounded.

    Academic studies

    The McGill Transportation Research and Munk School Global Economic Policy Lab analyses. Methodologically rigorous but bounded by funding and study scope.

    Journalism

    The Canadian Press and Globe and Mail reporting; CBC News; Globe coverage of the NFU response. Documentary but episodic.

    Affected stakeholders

    OFA, UPA, CFA, BFO, NFU. Authentic to affected communities but advocating for their members’ specific interests.

    Pro-rail advocacy

    Transport Action Canada and Transport Action Ontario. A credible, technically literate, pro-rail civil-society voice with no opposition to the project in principle, no economic interest in its outcome, and a fifty-year record of engagement with Canadian intercity passenger rail policy.

    This matters in two specific ways. First, it forecloses the response that the questions about ALTO’s cost, ridership, document release, and VIA-service impact are coming only from project-affected landowners or from anti-rail critics. They are coming from the country’s principal pro-rail civil-society voice, on the public record, having formally engaged with ALTO through ALTO’s own consultation process. Second, it puts the alternatives that have been considered — including the HPR framework the Initiative has been documenting — into the technical vocabulary of an organization that has the standing to describe them.

    Recommendations That Remain Live

    What still has not been produced

    As of May 2026, the public record shows that:

    The cost analysis Transport Action’s March 2026 letter asked for — and that TRAN Report 18 Recommendation 4 had asked for in September 2024 — has not been produced. The $60–90 billion AACE Class 5 figure in Q-923 stands without it.
    The Joint Project Office report Transport Action’s March 2026 letter asked to be released — and that TRAN Report 18 Recommendation 6 had asked to be released in September 2024 — has not been released. Transport Action’s additional point that the procurement-completion rationale for non-disclosure no longer applies has not been addressed.
    The VIA-impact analysis Transport Action’s March 2026 letter asked for, that the Senate TRCM raised concerns about in February 2026, and that TRAN Report 18 Recommendations 8 and 10 had asked for in September 2024, has not been produced. ALTO’s published material continues to refer to “optimization” of existing VIA services without a binding commitment.
    The ridership-model assumptions Transport Action’s March 2026 letter asked be made public have not been published. The government’s 43-million-by-2084 figure in Q-923 stands without disclosed methodology behind it.

    None of these are partisan demands. None of them is hostile to the project. All of them are recommendations from an established pro-rail advocacy organization, made through ALTO’s own consultation process, asking the same things that Parliament’s own committee was asking. Their continued non-fulfilment is procedural, not substantive — and procedurally, as The Report That Vanished sets out in detail, the questions remain available to be revived by parliamentary or stakeholder action.

    Download Full Brief
    The Voice ALTO Has Already Heard From (PDF)
    Reference document for federal decision-makers, parliamentarians, journalists, and constituents tracking the file
    Download PDF
    Sources

    Primary documents and references

    1.
    Transport Action Canada and Transport Action Ontario, Comments arising from ALTO HSR Stakeholder Roundtable and Public Consultation Sessions (letter to Peter Paz, Government and Stakeholder Relations, ALTO), March 16, 2026. Signed by Terry Johnson (President, Transport Action Canada) and Peter Miasek (President, Transport Action Ontario). ontario.transportaction.ca
    2.
    Transport Action Canada, Why did the government chose Alto? (open letter on ALTO HSR route options in eastern Ontario), 2026. ontario.transportaction.ca
    3.
    House of Commons Standing Committee on Transport, Infrastructure and Communities, Issues and Opportunities: High Frequency Rail in the Toronto to Quebec City Corridor. 18th Report, 44th Parliament, 1st Session. Tabled September 2024. ourcommons.ca
    4.
    Order Paper Question Q-923, 45th Parliament, 1st session. Asked by Philip Lawrence (MP for Northumberland–Clarke), March 5, 2026; answered April 22, 2026.
    5.
    ALTO HSR Citizen Research Initiative companion briefs: Reading the Answer (May 2026); Reading the Footnote (May 2026); The Report That Vanished (May 2026); What We Know About ALTO’s Reporting and Accountability (May 2026); Five Hundred Farms (May 2026).
  • Two stories about the same consultation

    Two Stories About the Same Consultation

    A travel-industry article and a survey of consultation participants describe what is supposedly the same process. They do not match.

    Two pictures, both circulating in May 2026

    On May 6, 2026, Travel and Tour World published a piece describing ALTO as “a bold vision for Canadian tourism” — a project the public is welcoming, with $800 million per year in tourism benefits, 50,000 construction jobs, a 1.1% GDP boost, and a “massive wave of feedback” now being analyzed. travelandtourworld.com

    An independent Participant Experience Survey conducted during the same consultation period drew 354 responses from residents along the proposed corridor. 87.8% rated ALTO’s information as Inadequate or Very Inadequate. 85.7% do not believe the consultation was designed to genuinely register community input. citizenresearch.ca

    Summary

    Two characterizations of the ALTO public consultation are now in active circulation. One, in the travel and tourism press, describes a project the public is enthusiastic about, with confident economic figures and a comprehensive June 2026 report poised to “summarize what the public wants.” The other, drawn from 354 residents who actually engaged with the consultation, describes a process that failed across every dimension assessed — notification, information, sessions, and responsiveness.

    This brief sets the two pictures alongside each other, point by point. The economic figures cited in the article appear nowhere in any released business case. The “massive wave of feedback” was, by the testimony of those generating it, neither welcomed nor genuinely heard. The article describes a consultation the public is welcoming. The survey describes one the public has rejected.

    Both pictures cannot be accurate at the same time.

    The Setting

    What is being compared, and why it matters

    The ALTO consultation closed on April 24, 2026. In the weeks since, two narratives about that consultation have begun to circulate publicly.

    The first, exemplified by the May 6 Travel and Tour World article, presents ALTO as a tourism and economic development opportunity that Canadians are embracing. It cites specific figures — $800 million per year in tourism, 50,000 jobs, 1.1% GDP — and quotes the Prime Minister and the ALTO CEO. It frames the consultation as a successful exercise in democratic engagement now poised for implementation.

    The second is the lived experience of residents who actually participated. The ALTO HSR Citizen Research Initiative ran a Participant Experience Survey from March 24 to April 17, 2026, drawing 354 responses (after data-integrity filtering), 85.7% of them from people living in or immediately adjacent to the proposed Eastern Ontario corridor. The full results are publicly available.

    This brief does not draw conclusions about ALTO’s ultimate merits as a project. Its purpose is narrower: to set the public-facing characterization of the consultation, as it appears in the travel-industry press, alongside the documented experience of the people the consultation was meant to engage.

    Side by Side

    The two accounts, point by point

    Each row pairs a claim or framing from the Travel and Tour World article with the corresponding finding from the Participant Experience Survey.

    Travel and Tour World · May 6, 2026Participant Experience Survey · n=354
    On feedback“A massive wave of feedback” now being analyzed for a June 2026 report that will “summarize what the public wants.” On feedback85.7% do not believe the consultation was designed to genuinely register community input. 45.4% take the stronger position: that the process was actively structured to suppress opposition.
    On informationConfident economic figures: $800 million per year in tourism, 50,000 jobs, 1.1% GDP boost, attributed loosely to Transport Canada. On information87.8% rated ALTO’s information as Inadequate or Very Inadequate. The most-cited missing items were environmental impact assessment (65.7%), precise route maps (45.6%), and the financial case — NPV, subsidy, ridership (35.4%).
    On tourism benefitsTreats the $800 million per year tourism benefit as flowing to the corridor regions broadly, including the rural communities the line would pass through. Tourism is the article’s central economic claim. On tourism benefitsInternational HSR research consistently finds tourism gains flow to station communities; communities the train passes through without stopping can lose tourism share as competing destinations become easier to reach. The southern corridor has no planned station between Ottawa and Peterborough. The Frontenac Arch alone supports a ~$1.8 billion regional tourism economy built on quiet, ecologically intact landscapes — assets fundamentally incompatible with a 300 km/h fenced corridor. citizenresearch.ca/tourism-economy
    On reachFrames ALTO as a national conversation, with the public widely engaged. On reachDirect notification from ALTO reached 2.0% of respondents. Awareness spread through neighbours, community Facebook groups, and citizen advocacy organizations. 28.5% learned of the consultation only in its final six weeks.
    On in-person sessionsTreats “over 10,000” in-person attendees as endorsement. On in-person sessionsOf survey respondents who attended an in-person session (n=161), 78.9% rated it Not Very Useful or Not Useful at All. Virtual sessions: 73.5%. Open-ended responses describe young staff with marketing scripts, contradictory answers between representatives, and absent executives.
    On responsivenessPresents ALTO as a project that engages and listens. On responsivenessOf 183 respondents who submitted questions during the consultation, 14 — 7.7% — received a specific, direct answer.
    On positive outcomesDescribes a future of shared sunsets and effortless family visits between Peterborough and Trois-Rivières. On positive outcomesAsked to name the most significant positive feature of the consultation itself, 48.0% identified none. The largest substantive positive theme, at 11.8%, was that the process had “galvanized community opposition.”
    From the Documentary Record

    Two observations, made directly from the two sources

    Without drawing inferences about motive or intent, two observations follow from setting the two accounts side by side.

    1. The figures the article presents as established are figures the public could not find

    The Travel and Tour World article cites $800M/year in tourism benefits, 50,000 jobs, and a 1.1% GDP boost as if these are settled facts. 65.7% of survey respondents named environmental impact assessment as missing information; 35.4% named the financial case — NPV, subsidy, ridership methodology. The economic claims circulating in the travel-industry press are precisely the figures that the public, by their own account, was not given access to evaluate.

    2. The “massive wave of feedback” is not what the article implies

    The article uses the volume of consultation submissions as evidence of public buy-in. The survey shows that 85.7% of those participating do not believe the process was designed to register their input meaningfully, and that 7.7% of those who submitted questions received a specific, direct answer. Volume of submissions, on the testimony of the submitters themselves, does not represent assent. It represents an attempt to be heard within a process most participants regard as already decided.

    The travel-industry article and the participant survey describe what is, in principle, the same consultation. They cannot both be accurate. Readers are invited to compare them directly — the article and the full survey results are linked in the sources below.

    Sources

    The two accounts

    1.
    Travel and Tour World, “Experience Canada Future: Powerful New Alto High-Speed Rail to Boost Tourism,” published May 6, 2026. travelandtourworld.com
    2.
    ALTO HSR Citizen Research Initiative, Participant Experience Survey: ALTO Consultation — What Residents Actually Experienced, published April 17, 2026. Analysis of 354 responses (analytical sample after data-integrity filter) collected March 24 – April 17, 2026. citizenresearch.ca/submission-survey
    3.
    ALTO HSR Citizen Research Initiative, The Southern Corridor Isn’t Just an Environmental Question — It’s an Economic One (Tourism & Economy companion brief). Drawing on CPAWS (2026), Statistics Canada, and international HSR tourism research. citizenresearch.ca/tourism-economy