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Alberta company to replace some B.C. bus service, after Greyhound pulls out

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VANCOUVER (NEWS 1130) – There’s relief for at least some passengers who rely on Greyhound to get around B.C. There’s word an Alberta company has just received approval to expand here, as Greyhound pulls out.

Saying service isn’t sustainable, Greyhound plans to end all service in B.C. (except for its U.S.-operated Vancouver-Seattle route) on Oct. 31, 2018.

But Ebus says it will fill some of that void for passengers who rely on bus service and has received approval for a twice daily Kamloops run. That service will include stops in Abbotsford, Chilliwack, Hope, and Merritt.

The company is also planning to add service to Kelowna and Vernon.

At Pacific Central Station in Vancouver today, one man told NEWS 1130 he was pleased to hear the news, but said it’s the small communities up north that are even more in need of inter-city service.

“There’s a lot of people sick in remote communities that really need transportation to get to the hospital for their needs.”

Some other passengers who would have been left in the lurch come November are grateful Ebus is taking over at least one route to start.

“Every three months I visit my family in the Okanagan. This is good news. I had no idea how else I was going to visit my family,” said Pesi.

“I was going to fly or, I don’t know, hope for the best, I guess,” added Louis.

Ebus hopes to have its Vancouver-Kamloops run operational before Nov. 1, 2018.

The Passenger Transportation Board has been fast-tracking applications from companies looking to run inter-city services in B.C. as Greyhound gets ready to pull out of Western Canada.

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Small bus company to carry passengers in the western Kootenays, following Greyhound’s exit

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TRAIL (NEWS 1130) – Greyhound bus service is set to end in BC next Wednesday – and even earlier in the Kootenays, where the last bus will roar through towns this weekend.

A private bus company based in Trail has stepped up to the plate, and will have its inaugural run on Tuesday.

Silver City Stage Lines will operate between Nelson and Kelowna six days a week.

The company is owned by Fritz Keller, who had provided bus service as a contractor for Greyhound between Trail and Castlegar for the last nine years.

He says expanding his service made sense, after Greyhound announced its departure.

“I get a lot of compliments. I was the only one to offer any service. Otherwise, there would be no bus service beyond this Sunday. People would be really, really stuck.”

He predicts the elderly will be his target market.

“Lots of seniors. The roads, especially in the winter, are horrible out here. Flights are routinely cancelled. People can’t fly out.”

He feels badly about people living east of Nelson, who will be without any bus service, but he says if his routes are profitable, he may expand.

“There will be no service from Nelson to Creston and Cranbrook. We will see what the situation will be in the spring. Expansion is definitely a possibility.”

The service will operate from Sundays to Fridays, with a bus leaving Nelson at 6:30 a.m. and arriving in Kelowna at noon, and turning around at 1 p.m. and arriving in Nelson 6:30 p.m. Stops will include Castlegar, Trail, Grand Forks, and Rock Creek.

Silver City will operate a 14-passenger Sprinter bus, with an additional bus to accommodate more passengers during the Christmas season.

So far three other companies have been given approval to provide bus service in BC in Greyhound’s absence.

Rider Express will carry people along the TransCanada to Winnipeg.

Ebus will offer routes linking Vancouver, Kamloops and Kelowna.

Vancouver Island-based Wilson’s Transportation will travel between Kamloops, Kelowna and Vancouver.

Greyhound will continue to carry passengers between Vancouver and Seattle.

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Most B.C. Greyhound routes will be covered by end of year

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VANCOUVER (NEWS 1130) – Private bus companies are stepping up to take over most of Greyhound’s B.C. routes, as it prepares to pull out of the province, according to the Ministry of Transportation.

Transportation Minister Claire Trevena announced 83 per cent of the routes Greyhound will cease running on Oct. 31 will be picked up by other private operators before the end of the year. She credits the speed of new companies filling the void with the Passenger Transportation fast tracking their applications.

“I’m please to say that when Greyhound pulls out, there will still be safe, affordable and reliable bus transportation in the province,” Trevena said, adding some companies have already started service, while some others will start mid-November.

She says bus companies think they can make money on routes Greyhound called unsustainable, but they won’t be receiving any public subsidies.

“There’s no public money going to these private companies that have come forward to provide service on these routes,” she said,

The province will continue its B.C. Bus North service, a provincially funded, base-level, interim service to cover the majority of routes in the north. The service is expected to cost $2 million annually according to Trevena.

There are still eight routes that haven’t been filled. They include: Cache-Creek to Kamloops, Kamloops to Valemount, Valemount to the B.C.-Alberta border, Dawson Creek to the B.C.-Alberta border, Salmo to Creston, Cranbrook to the B.C.-Alberta border, Fort Nelson up to the B.C.-Yukon border, and the Hope to Princeton route.

“For these eight segments, we are going to be working with the Passenger Transportation Board to issue requests for Expressions of Interest in the coming weeks to further engage the private sector on filling the gap,” Trevena said.

Trevena says her priority as minister is to work with the private sector and communities to find a solution.

“There is obviously still more work to do on the routes that Greyhound is abandoning. We want to make sure that people aren’t left stranded.”

Greyhound is set to end its service on all of its B.C. routes, except its American-operated Vancouver-Seattle service, on Wednesday.

While this announcement means people will still have new bus options on Greyhounds routes, passengers will now need to research multiple companies to get to their destination rather than the previous one-stop-shop Greyhound provided.

When it comes to cost, Trevena says private operators will set their own ticket prices, which are regulated by the Passenger Transportation Board.

While she did not say how much she expects prices to be, Trevena believes they will be affordable.

“It will be affordable travel in the fact that many people cannot afford to travel by plane, which is obviously the alternative for some of these distances that we’re talking about,” she said.

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Feds say help will come for remote, Indigenous communities without buses

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OTTAWA – The federal government says it will step in to support the transportation needs of some northern and remote communities affected by the closure of Greyhound bus operations in western Canada and northern Ontario.

Federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau says Ottawa is open to help affected provinces pay for bus service in communities where private enterprise has not come forward to service abandoned routes.

“We know exactly how much money that we are going to make available for this, and I can assure you that we will have it covered, and we’ll make that information available very shortly,” Garneau says.

As well, Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott says her department will subsidize bus services to remote Indigenous communities where needed.

The announcement came as Greyhound was winding down all but one of its routes in the West.

Garneau is dismissing suggestions the federal government step in with a national bus line.

“An actual fact: this goes all the way back to 1954,” he says. “The provinces indicated that they wanted to take care of bus services within their provinces, and that has been the model that has been used now for over 60 years.”

Greyhound announced in July that it would stop serving unsustainable services in Canada as of Oct. 31.

Since Greyhound’s announcement in July, other private companies have filled 87 per cent of the vacant routes.

For the remaining 13 per cent, the federal government will share the costs with the provinces to return bus services.

Private companies fill the gap

As Greyhound prepares to say goodbye to most of B.C., E-bus is already starting service.

One of its new routes could even boost business at Abbotsford International Airport.

Abbotsford Mayor Henry Braun says because of low cost airlines — like Swoop and Flair — more and more people want to fly out of the Fraser Valley.

“We’re seeing people coming from Vernon, Kelowna — they’re driving down here.”

And Ebus will drop them off right at the terminal, possibly taking dozens of cars off the road, according to Braun, who adds this could help the airport set a new passenger record.

“They’ll have the ability to leave their cars at home, and drive in a very comfortable and equipped bus, potentially taking 50 cars off the road,” he explains. “We’re on track this year to push through 800,000, which is another 20 plus per cent increase.”

The new route also has stops to the west, so people wanting to fly out of YXX can jump on a bus from Vancouver’s Pacific Station to Abbotsford International for $40.

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Greyhound exit leaves gap for homeless, domestic violence shelters

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CALGARY – Organizations that help the homeless and those fleeing domestic violence say they have lost a vital resource with Greyhound’s exit from the West —and they’re not sure how well a patchwork of alternatives will be able to fill the gap.

Awo Taan Healing Lodge, a 32-bed emergency shelter for women and children in Calgary, has relied heavily on the bus company over the years, said executive director Josie Nepinak.

Many of the lodge’s clients come from rural areas and often public transportation is the only safe option, she said.

“They could perhaps be pushed into more vulnerable kinds of situations where they might hitchhike — and I have seen that happen — therefore putting them at greater risk, not only of violence, but potentially homicide as well.”

Greyhound wound down all but one of its routes in Western Canada and northern Ontario on Wednesday. Only a U.S.-run route from Seattle to Vancouver remains.

Several regional companies have come forward to offer bus services and have taken over 87 per cent of the abandoned Greyhound routes, Federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau said this week.

Garneau said Ottawa will work with the provinces to come up with alternatives to service the remaining routes. As well, Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott said her department will subsidize bus services to remote Indigenous communities where needed.

Related video: Greyhound service officially ends in B.C.

Nepinak said it’s good new companies are stepping in to handle Greyhound’s old routes, but she admits she’s not familiar yet with what’s out there.

She said staff at her organization, and others like it, work flat out, and Greyhound’s exit makes their jobs more difficult.

“There needs to be a central place in order to find that information and many of us are so busy.”

There is no emergency homeless shelter in Revelstoke, B.C., a picturesque mountain community just off the Trans-Canada Highway.

Cathy Girling, who does homeless outreach for Community Connections in Revelstoke, said her group would sometimes purchase Greyhound tickets for people to get to larger B.C. centres for a place to sleep.

“I’m not sure where we’re going from here,” she said. “We’re taking it as it goes and seeing what happens.”

Revelstoke is now served by Regina-based Rider Express, which has stops along the Trans-Canada between Vancouver and Calgary. The westbound bus stops once daily in Revelstoke at 1 p.m. The eastbound bus comes at 3:25 a.m.

There is no bus connection from Revelstoke south to population centres in the Okanagan Valley such as Vernon or Kelowna.

“We’re a small community that is already quite isolated,” said Girling. “It adds to our isolation.”

In Brandon, Man., Greyhound helped connect people in need with their support networks — whether they be friends, families or social services, said John Jackson, executive director of Samaritan House Ministries.

“In Manitoba … the geographical distances between towns and cities is so vast,” he said.

“Multiple times we have made arrangements to purchase clients’ bus tickets using Greyhound’s services. The fact that that has gone away is going to leave a very big gap.”

Jackson said it’s too soon to tell how helpful alternative bus services will be.

“The concern is you need a company that has good infrastructure and is reputable and is going to provide a reliable service.”

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Greyhound replacements find tough road to prosperity in Western Canada

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CALGARY — Six months after Greyhound Canada shut down most of its service in Western Canada and northern Ontario, the companies that stepped in to take its place say they still face a rough road full of unexpected turns.

And they concede that the level of service they are providing doesn’t come close to matching what Greyhound had offered before it decided to abandon what it says was a money-losing business.

Bus operators report strong competition on profitable routes with good ridership, while remote routes with lower numbers usually aren’t served at all or get less frequent or less reliable service, often on smaller vehicles or ones that don’t accommodate disabled passengers.

“If you’re travelling the major markets, you definitely have options and there are good carriers that are reputable,” said John Stepovy, director of business development for Calgary-based Pacific Western Transportation, which operates Red Arrow and Ebus services in Alberta and B.C.

“Once you start going into smaller markets or travelling interprovincially, the marketplace is a lot more scattered and the travelling public is forced to create their own journeys. Previously, you just needed one ticket through Greyhound.”

About a year ago, Pacific Western was hired by the province of British Columbia to operate its BC Bus North service after Greyhound cancelled routes to communities including Prince Rupert and Dawson Creek.

Since the larger Greyhound shutdown last Oct. 31, it has added more than a dozen buses as it rolled out intercity services in B.C. through its own brands for the first time and expanded service in Alberta as well, including taking on Edmonton-Camrose and Medicine Hat-Lethbridge routes aided by Alberta government grants.

The loss of Greyhound means it can be difficult or impossible for passengers to find connecting bus routes, said Joe Jansen, executive vice-president of Wilson’s Transportation of Victoria, which moves passengers via bus and ferry between downtown Victoria and Vancouver.

It had an interline agreement with Greyhound that allowed it to sell tickets in Victoria to almost anywhere in Canada but that ended with Greyhound’s withdrawal.

“Greyhound was the one carrier in Western Canada that tied everything from Winnipeg to Victoria together. We don’t have that anymore and that can’t possibly be positive,” said Jansen, adding it’s difficult to quantify the setback after one winter of results.

Wilson’s has steadied its revenue by buying Tofino Bus Lines last fall to become the major operator of bus routes on Vancouver Island.

It applied for and was granted B.C. licences for former Greyhound routes Vancouver-Kelowna and Vancouver-Kamloops, but was then dismayed to learn that licences had also been given to rival Pacific Western — the company is now reassessing the viability of continuing to offer those services, Jansen said.

Meanwhile, in Edmonton, president Sunny Balwaria of Cold Shot bus services says his business is growing slowly, but he’s not in a position to meet passenger requests for expansion.

“I don’t have deep pockets like (some competitors) and there’s no support from government anywhere, so maybe next year I expand, after I steady out what I have in my hand,” he said.

Cold Shot had partnered with Greyhound to operate four routes in northern Alberta. When Greyhound left, it decided to expand into more empty Greyhound routes with a lower cost option using smaller 20-passenger buses.

Competition, however, is fierce, says Balwaria. For instance, there are now three companies offering the Edmonton-Grande Prairie route previously served only by Greyhound.

Cold Shot decided to drop its Edmonton-Camrose service last year when Pacific Western was chosen to supply the subsidized service. But it expanded to start its first service in B.C. to the northeastern community of Fort St. John.

Regina-based Rider Express, a company that was using a handful of 15-passenger minibuses to provide short-haul services in Saskatchewan, had high hopes last fall to replace some of Greyhound’s long-haul routes by adding six full-sized buses.

It hasn’t worked out as expected, said owner Firat Uray.

Rider started with daily Vancouver-Calgary service, dropped it to once-a-week, then went back to three days a week in early April and is now considering restoring daily service as warmer temperatures bring out more travellers.

It also started a Calgary-Winnipeg service last fall but cancelled it within weeks because it was only selling a few tickets — and sometimes none — on each run.

He said he’s identified potentially profitable short routes in B.C. but has been frustrated with the length of time it takes to win licences there.

In the meantime, he’s planning to add an Edmonton-Calgary service later this spring.

“Where people have more time than money, bus services thrive,” said Barry Prentice, a professor of transportation economics at the University of Manitoba’s Asper School of Business.

He said he’s not surprised that longer routes in the southern parts of the West are challenged because they must compete with low-cost air transport and an abundance of passenger vehicles.

In Manitoba, Indigenous-owned Mahihkan Bus Lines is going head-to-head with Maple Bus Lines and Thompson Bus and Freight on service between Winnipeg and the northern community of Thompson.

Mahihkan CEO Suzanne Barbeau-Bracegirdle says the bus system isn’t meeting the needs of Indigenous people in Manitoba and she isn’t happy about that, but her company must follow a conservative business plan to survive.

“We want to provide that service where they can go to Winnipeg to get their medical services,” she said.

“But we have our timelines and we’re following out timelines to a tee.”

Follow Dan Healing on Twitter.

B.C. man says there’s no excuse for uncoordinated private bus services

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VANCOUVER (NEWS 1130) – In the modern technological age, a Kaslo man says he can’t see why it’s so hard to coordinate rural bus services.

His comments come as bus companies struggle to profit from rural routes, about six months after Greyhound Canada left the province.

Andy Shadrack says he relies on flying a lot more than he used to.

“I just had to send my spouse using my points to fly to Vancouver because it was impossible for her to take the bus,” he tells NEWS 1130.

Shadrack previously petitioned the Passenger Transportation Board to ensure new services were in place before allowing Greyhound to leave.

Half a year after the company pulled out of Western Canada, some towns are still without any service while others struggle to adapt to a new network of providers.

“The bus out of Nelson to Kelowna arrives less than an hour before the bus that leaves from Kelowna to go to Vancouver. Halfway across the city. They haven’t even coordinated putting the depots in the same place.”

Shadrack believes its in the public’s interest for the Transportation Board to coordinate and better regulate the new routes.

He says the situation is laughable.

“We can’t set things up so they’re properly coordinated? Give me a break, this is a public service for goodness sake. That’s why it’s regulated, to make sure it operates in the interest of the public, not the operators.”

He notes in the U.K., the system is better thought out.

“In the U.K., there are all kinds of train services and bus services, but I can buy a ticket in one place and use five different services.”

Bus service is heavily relied on by many people in areas like the Slocan Valley and many other parts of the interior, Shadrack notes, adding many of the passengers are seeking medical treatment in cities like Kelowna.

“This isn’t just an issue for B.C., this is an issue for entire Western Canada. It was half a million people who were impacted — you’d think that government would be concerned when half a million people are impacted.”

One dead, five hurt in bus shooting in California: police

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LEBEC, Calif. — A gunman killed one passenger and wounded five others on a Greyhound bus traveling from Los Angeles to the San Francisco Bay Area early Monday morning, the California Highway Patrol said.

The shooting happened at about 1:20 a.m. as the bus was on the Grapevine section of Interstate 5 high in the mountains between LA and the San Joaquin Valley.

The bus driver somehow managed to get the shooter off the bus and left him on the highway shoulder, where he was arrested without incident, Sgt. Brian Pennings told reporters. He had no immediate information about the motive.

After leaving the gunman behind, the driver continued on to the next exit and pulled into the parking lot of a gas station.

Pennings said there were a “significant” number of people aboard the bus.

“We’re grateful that the bus driver acted quickly,” Pennings said.

Witnesses and the suspect were being interviewed.

Officials did not immediately identify the suspect or the victims. Pennings said one of the five wounded people was flown to a hospital.

The area is in Tejon Pass, which rises to an elevation of more than 4,100 feet (1,250 meters).


Greyhound Canada to cut all bus routes, end operations

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TORONTO – Greyhound Canada is permanently cutting all bus routes across the country, shutting down the intercity bus carrier’s operations after nearly a century of service.

The motor coach company said its remaining routes in Ontario and Quebec will cease permanently on Thursday.

Citing declining ridership, deregulation and subsidized competition, the company announced in July 2018 the cancellation of all but one B.C. route, which is the U.S.-operated service between Vancouver and Seattle.

Its American affiliate, Greyhound Lines, Inc., will continue to operate that route, as well as cross-border routes to Toronto and Montreal, once the border reopens.

In 2018, it also cancelled service in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba.

The decision to fully shut down operations comes a year after Greyhound Canada temporarily suspended all service due to a sharp decline in passengers and mounting travel restrictions amid the first wave of COVID-19.

The bus carrier has struggled for years with declining ridership, increasing competition and deregulation.

But the complete loss of so-called farebox revenue during the pandemic has forced the company to permanently cease operations, said Greyhound Canada senior vice-president Stuart Kendrick.

“It’s been a very tough decision and one we’ve taken with a heavy heart,” he told The Canadian Press in an interview. “It’s been a lifeline for many Canadians for more than 90 years. This will have a massive impact.”

The decision is a blow to rural and remote areas that rely on a patchwork of private intercity bus companies for transportation.

The service has long been part of a network linking smaller communities and big cities, offering an affordable and convenient mode of travel for everyone from essential workers and students to the elderly and backpackers.

Yet the rise in car ownership, ride sharing, discount airlines and urban migration has slowly eroded bus ridership, leading Greyhound Canada to gradually reduce the frequency of some services and cut other routes altogether.

“Private carriers are relying on the farebox revenue to maintain these rural routes,” Kendrick said. “When ridership declines, we have a decision to make. We either cut the frequency, exit the rural markets or look for some help.”

Despite the ongoing challenges with its remaining routes since its cuts in 2018, nothing could have prepared the company for the dramatic 95 per cent drop in passengers at the outset of the pandemic, Kendrick said.

Multiple coach bus companies teamed up and approached the federal and provincial governments for financial aid amid mounting COVID-19 restrictions. But Kendrick said they were referred to existing pandemic supports — what he called “`negligible” for the beleaguered passenger transportation industry — prompting Greyhound Canada to temporarily suspend all service last May.

“There’s really been a lack of support,” Kendrick said. “We don’t get subsidies.”

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Intercity bus carriers are also competing with publicly funded train and transit systems, he said, putting private companies at a disadvantage.

The Ontario government has also promised to deregulate the intercommunity bus industry starting in July, a move that would end Greyhound Canada’s control of certain routes.

“We have had exclusive private bus service on certain corridors,” he said, noting that it provided passengers with safe, frequent and affordable service.

“Greyhound Canada’s tough decision today is going to have a massive impact on customers, especially those riding in the rural network.”

About 260 employees were laid off after Greyhound Canada temporarily ended its passenger service last May. An additional 45 employees will be laid off as a result of the permanent closure, Kendrick said.

The company plans to sell the bus stations it owns, he said. As for its leased properties, some of the agreements have expired or have an “out clause,” while it will honour the terms of leases it’s obliged to continue paying, Kendrick said.

The company said tickets for travel after Thursday will be refunded. Customers with a valid travel voucher can also request a refund.

All Ontario and Quebec routes that were temporarily suspended in May 2020 will permanently end as of midnight on Thursday. The routes are:

  • Toronto-Ottawa-Montreal
  • Toronto-London-Windsor
  • Sudbury-Ottawa/Toronto
  • Toronto-Kitchener/Guelph/Cambridge
  • Toronto-Niagara Falls
  • Ottawa-Kingston

 

The pandemic has had a debilitating impact on Canada’s struggling intercity bus industry.

Coach bus companies have reduced service frequency or cut routes due to the precipitous drop in ridership, threatening to erode the country’s transportation network.

In January, senators from the Maritimes sent a letter to federal Transport Minister Omar Alghabra urging Ottawa to provide financial assistance to Maritime Bus.

The Charlottetown-based company had warned that without funding, it would have to cut routes.

The senators said that with Via Rail service suspended and airlines slashing flights to the region, the bus was needed for essential travel, such as transporting blood products or patients to health appointments across the region.

In January, the New Brunswick government stepped in to provide $720,000 to the private regional bus operator to maintain service to Edmundston and Campbellton in the province’s north.

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