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3 June 2004
CPR President Says
Canada's Transportation Infrastructure Deficit Holding Back Economic
Expansion
Ottawa - Canada has built
up a transportation infrastructure deficit that is starting to hold back the country's economic
expansion, Rob Ritchie, President and Chief Executive Officer of Canadian Pacific Railway, said
today at the opening of National Transportation Week.
"Truckers have to cope with increasing congestion and bottlenecks at border crossings. Bulk
shippers want to move more product than our rail networks can handle. West Coast ports struggle to
manage a huge influx of container traffic. Commuters travel to work on clogged highways and city
streets.
"It's time for transportation to move to the top of Canada's agenda," Mr. Ritchie said.
He made the comments after receiving National Transportation Week's
Person-of-the-Year award for 2004.
"Because of constraints placed upon them by outdated public policy, the railways are not able
to invest enough to fulfil the demands that society and industry are starting to place on us
now," Mr. Ritchie said.
"While the railways are grappling with their burning need to invest, our highway network is
also being strained. So here you have the two backbones of the economy - railways and highways -
under stress. At the same time, Canadian ports have a government-imposed borrowing cap
that prevents them from making required capital investments."
He warned the emerging capacity problem in the rail industry will become more acute as any talk of
regulated running rights, or open access to rail lines, scares away needed investment capital.
"It's now fashionable for some shippers to say... railways should be regulated like gas,
electric and telecommunications utilities, and that anyone who wants to provide rail service should
simply be able to come onto a railway's lines. This argument may be compelling to some, but it is
patently false because it ignores the plain fact that rail freight is not uniform. Open access is
scaring away the investment that railways need to fund expansion of their capacity today."
He said the railway industry urgently needs regulatory and taxation changes that will allow railways
to increase their pace of investment in their networks.
Mr. Ritchie called on all the surface transportation modes and the federal and provincial governments
to work together. "For instance, rail-based solutions can help trucking companies
address their driver shortages and at the same time take capacity pressure off our highways and city
streets. Our federal leadership could harmonize the current hodgepodge of provincial trucking rules
and discourage the provinces from taking huge, inappropriate bites out of railway investment dollars
through property and fuel taxes. Governments can implement "user pay" schemes, which mean
those who use public infrastructure pay for it."
While there is no lack of ideas about how to address Canada's transportation infrastructure deficit,
Mr. Ritchie said it is "time to stop talking about solutions and move to action for ourselves
and for future generations of Canadians."
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