Still no service on 3 Montreal-area commuter train lines pending railway dispute resolution - Action News
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Montreal

Still no service on 3 Montreal-area commuter train lines pending railway dispute resolution

Labour Minister has sent rail dispute to binding arbitration. Service on Exo lines 11 Vaudreuil-Hudson, 12 Saint-Jrme and 14 Candiac remains suspended.

Exo to offer free shuttle service as of Monday

A commuter train at a train station
Resuming service on all Exo commuter train lines is a process that will take time, says spokesperson. The public transit authority is awaiting instructions from the Canadian Pacific Kansas City Ltd. (CPKC) railway company. (Patrick Macintyre/Radio-Canada)

Service to three Exo commuter train lines that serve stations in and around the island of Montreal is still at a halt, asCanada's two largest rail networksand their employees work toward resolving an ongoing labour dispute.

Lines 11 Vaudreuil-Hudson, 12 Saint-Jrme and 14 Candiachave not been running since Thursday afterCanadian National Railway Co. (CN) and Canadian Pacific Kansas City Ltd. (CPKC) locked out 9,300 engineers, conductors and yard workers.

Exo lines13 Mont-Saint-Hilaire and 15 Mascouche, which use the CN network, continue to operate as normal because CN railtraffic controllers are not affected by the labour dispute, said Exo spokesperson EricEdstrmin a statement.

Labour Minister Steve MacKinnonsent the dispute to binding arbitration, he announced later on Thursday.

"The resumption timeframe is currently unknown," saidEdstrm,adding that the public transit authority is awaiting instructions from CPKCrailway company.

Exo is encouraging commuters on the island of Montreal and in Laval to use theSocit de transport de MontralandSocit de transport de Lavalpublic transit networks as much as possible.

Exo will be offering a free shuttle service as of Monday as an alternative to the three affected train lines, as it waits for aresolution to the labour dispute. The shuttles will run during peak hours and will mostly serve stations outside the island of Montreal.

Edstrmexplains that resuming service is a process that will take time. Exo staff will have to reposition the trains which are currently at the end of the rail lines or in garages. Thiscould take anywhere between a couple of hours or a couple of days, he told CBC's DaybreakMontreal. It all depends on when Exo will have access to the tracks and when the CPKC train controllers will return to work.

"These manoeuvres could take time considering the rail congestion linked to the resumption and will depend on the priority given to passenger trains," he said.

The affected commuter rail lines combined serve approximately 21,000 passengers per day.

The shuttle service will only begin Monday asExo needs time to hire and train new drivers, some of whom are coming from outside Montreal given a shortage of drivers, compounded bythe back-to-school period.

In an ideal world, Exo would own the railways for its trains, saysEdstrm, adding that "we're looking into it."

"We need money. We need offers," he said.

Written by Cassandra Yanez-Leyton