Canadian bus companies have plans to fill the gap left by Greyhound
From East and West, Canada's bus companies say they're ready to ride to the rescue
Almost every Canadian of a certain age can remember the first long bus ride that took them off on a youthful adventure.
In the case of your correspondent, part of that journey as a tender 17-year-old was on the exotically named Grey Goose Lines, which dropped me on a lonely highway somewhere east of Atikokan, Ont., for a summer job as a junior forest ranger.
While Greyhound Canada's announcement of its final departure from southern Ontario and Quebec this week may have come as a shock to people who depend on the service, those in the know say the company's loss may have a silver lining.
Early reports that the 'Hound's disappearance sounds the death knell for an outmoded system of transportation are simply not true, said Terence Johnson, national president of Transport Action Canada.
Buses still matter for people who don't drive or have access to a car — and to connect communities where airlines are too expensive or non-existent.
Now, Johnson says Greyhound's departure could be the catalyst for a new coast-to-coast bus network formed by an interlocking group of domestic bus companies from both east and west — provided the federal government is ready to help.
"A lot of Canadian companies don't mind seeing the back of Greyhound," said Johnson, who sees the bounce-back following the pandemic as a moment to transform and improve Canada's transportation system.
Regional players ready
That transformation may not be immediate. Johnson said there may be a shakeout period as new bus services fill the gap left by the U.S. carrier, at a time when they're already struggling with a crash in traffic due to COVID-19 restrictions.
But these are not inexperienced startups. They're established regional players, and when you start looking, there are more of them than you might realize.
Already, companies across the country are looking at how to get a piece of what they see as the lucrative Central Canadian market for both passenger service and parcel delivery.
Just as Grey Goose Lines expanded out of a small startup in the 1920s in Sperling, Man., before being ultimately swallowed up by Greyhound and closed, there appears to be no shortage of strong regional companies looking to take Greyhound's place.
"Rider Express is coming to Ontario and Quebec," says a notice on the company's website posted on the same day Greyhound announced it was pulling out.
"As a truly Canadian company, Rider Express will be able to connect across Canada with a single bus ticket."
Success where Greyhound failed
But how could a company that started small in Saskatchewan after the province cancelled the money-losing provincial Saskatchewan Transportation Company in 2017 make money where Greyhound could not?
According to Rider's general manager, Omer Kanca, after years of serving relatively sparsely peopled routes between Vancouver and Winnipeg, the Windsor–Toronto–Montreal corridor will be rich pickings.
"The fact that we achieve ... this in these areas itself proves that our business model is much better than Greyhound," Kanca said.
In partnership with Ontario Northland bus service based in North Bay, Ont., Kanca says Rider will be able to provide integrated service from the West right up to the edge of Atlantic Canada, a system that he is expecting to have running by summer.
"We are ready," Kanca said on the phone Friday. "We have buses waiting to be put in service."
Rider Express is not the only company with its eye on Greyhound's abandoned routes. Insiders say there were many reasons the U.S. company withdrew, but one was that as of July 1, the Ontario government is deregulating bus service in the province's well-travelled southern routes. That would open the way for any company that can get a licence to operate.
WATCH | Why Greyhound says it left and why it matters:
Competition and co-operation
John Stepovy, director of business development at Edmonton-based Pacific Western Transportation, which operates EBus and Red Arrow on routes in Western Canada, says the company is looking into launching a service in Ontario.
Operating under Alberta's deregulated system since 2011, Pacific Western is prepared to compete. But it also sees value in co-operation with companies that understand their regional markets.
"We're continuing to look for opportunities to expand the service and to work with other regional carriers for connections," Stepovy said.
A system for co-ordinating with strong regional players like Pacific Western is exactly what Mike Cassidy, the owner of Coach Atlantic Maritime Bus, has in mind.
Cassidy hopes to create a co-ordinated national bus network, with regional bus services across the country and with co-operation from the federal government. Companies already in talks include Pacific Western, Kasper, which operates in Manitoba and northwestern Ontario, and Cassidy's Coach Atlantic.
"For the last six months ... we've been presenting a coast-to-coast bus coalition where you do not give total responsibility for a trans-Canada bus line to one particular company," Cassidy said.
Part of his plan would see some kind of government subsidies for the capital costs of inter-city buses similar to the money given to urban bus services.
Not just cherry-picking
The idea is not to just cherry-pick the lucrative routes but to provide a cost-effective service, connecting a backbone cross-country network to regional participants offering routes to small and Indigenous communities.
Using a shared system of software, Cassidy foresees a system where passengers will be able to move seamlessly from carrier to carrier. It would also offer each local operator access to the lucrative package-delivery system traditionally run by bus services.
One of the advantages of such a network of parts, says Transport Action's Johnson, is that the system would be less likely to collapse because one company failed. He said Greyhound seemed to think it was too big to fail and deserved federal handouts to keep going.
Johnson, like many others across the country, believes the federal government must be involved to help co-ordinate an inter-provincial transportation service that integrates urban and inter-urban systems to serve all Canadians.
"There is a great deal of finessing of this relationship to make it all work properly for the person who matters, the passenger, the Canadian, who wants to go from Corner Brook to Sudbury to go to university," Johnson said.
"She should be able to buy a ticket and know all those connections are going to work, and it should be easy."
Follow Don Pittis on Twitter @don_pittis
With files from James Dunne