Manitoba

Ontario company to take over Selkirk-Winnipeg bus line

A Thunder Bay company will take over a bus line between Selkirk and Winnipeg after a Winnipeg company put the brakes on it just over a year after taking it over.

Bus rider hopes company will steer route in right direction

Kasper Wabinski, the owner of Kasper Transportation Service, is confident his company can make a success of a Winnipeg-Selkirk bus line that Exclusive Bus Lines found unprofitable. (Jeff Walters/CBC)

Maybe the third time's the charm. That's certainly what Daniel Denton hopes.

The St. Andrews resident and second-year biochemistry student at the University of Winnipeg relies on a Selkirk-Winnipeg bus route that Exclusive Bus Lines is putting the brakes on after just more than a year in service.

Now a Thunder Bay company, Kasper Transportation Service, is taking over the line on Sept. 1, and Denton hopes it will keep the route permanently.

"Since I've started riding the bus, we've gone through two bus companies and constant schedule changes, so something constant, reliable and easy to work into your schedule would be fantastic," he said.

Denton said the bus service from Exclusive has been excellent, and he was sad earlier this year when the company announced it was doing away with the line due to declining ridership.

'Here we go again'

"It was sort of the feeling 'oh here we go again,'" Denton said.

Exclusive took over the route in 2016 after Beaver Bus Lines dissolved the route after 68 years of service.

The line runs from Selkirk to Winnipeg and has several stops along the way, including in St. Andrews.

Kasper is banking on using smaller Mercedes-Benz sprinter vans on the route to make sure it gets the best bang for its buck.

Minibus to be used

Scott Spak, Kasper's vice president of operations, said the smaller vehicles make sense as opposed to large charter buses currently used by Exclusive Bus Lines.

"We've had great feedback already," he said speaking of a meeting he had with the City of Selkirk. "I'm very confident that it's going to take off and do very well."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

​Austin Grabish is a reporter for CBC News in Winnipeg. Since joining CBC in 2016, he's covered several major stories. Some of his career highlights have been documenting the plight of asylum seekers leaving America in the dead of winter for Canada and the 2019 manhunt for two teenage murder suspects. In 2021, he won an RTDNA Canada award for his investigative reporting on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, which triggered change. Have a story idea? Email: austin.grabish@cbc.ca

with files from Janice Grant, Radio Noon