Via Rail ramps up Ontario service in return to pre-pandemic levels

Crown corporation to add new round trips from Toronto to Ottawa, London

Image | New VIA Rail train

Caption: A Via Rail train at the London, Ont., station. The Crown corporation says it's adding a new round trip between Toronto and London and two between Toronto and Ottawa. (Colin Butler/CBC)

Via Rail is increasing service in Ontario, returning the passenger railway to levels not seen since before the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Crown corporation says it is reintroducing two round trips between Toronto and Ottawa and one round trip between London and Toronto, starting in late October.
The ramp-up comes three and a half years after the pandemic brought some operations to a screeching halt, when Via Rail suspended its cross-Canada routes and temporarily laid off more than 1,000 workers.
Chief executive Mario Peloquin says the railway aims to strike a balance between meeting passengers' travel needs and deploying its limited resources.
Last quarter, operating losses before government funding hit $120 million, and the organization has not turned a full-year profit since 2017.
Greg Gormick, who heads On Track Consulting, says the expanded service announced Thursday will resemble Via's timetable prior to COVID-19, enabled by crew training and new train deliveries from Siemens.