St. John New Brunswick - NB Southern Railway (NBSR) will face a five week trial in Saint John next March on 24 charges related to the transportation of oil.
The company, a subsidiary of J.D. Irving Ltd., pleaded not guilty to all charges on 6 Apr 2018.
The trial will start 25 Mar 2019 and the Crown asked the court on Wednesday for three weeks to present its arguments.
NBSR said it needed seven days to present its side.
An earlier start date of 7 Jan 2019 was contemplated, but the Crown said it had two key witnesses who could not be available in February.
One of those witnesses was also unavailable in March.
A court date of 27 Nov 2018 was also set aside to resolve any issues before the trial begins.
Prosecutor Guylaine Basque of Moncton advised the court that a francophone interpreter will be required for some portion of the trial, which will be held in English.
Lake Megantic Derailment
The Public Prosecution Service of Canada says the charges stem from a Transport Canada investigation triggered by the Lake Megantic derailment and fire that killed 47 people in Quebec in 2013.
Twelve of the charges under the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Act relate to failing to create proper shipping documents for the purpose of transporting petroleum crude oil.
The other 12 charges relate to having unqualified personnel "offer for transport dangerous goods, to wit, petroleum crude oil," according to the informant, Transport Canada inspector Marc Grignon.
The alleged offences occurred between 3 Nov 2012, and 5 Jul 2013.
During that period, about 14,000 cars of crude oil were transported for Irving Oil, according to the Crown.
On 26 Oct 2017 Irving Oil was ordered to pay $4 million after pleading guilty to 34 offences under the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Act.
About $3.6 million of that money was directed to research programs in the field of safety standards.
Another $400,000 was paid in fines.
In addition, Irving Oil was ordered to submit a plan of corrective measures with Transport Canada.
CBC News requested a copy of that plan but was denied.
Transport Canada advised that the corrective action is protected under Canada's privacy laws and the Access to Information Act.
Rachel Cave.