Thank you very much.
It's a pleasure to be here on behalf of the City of London to speak on the subject of high-speed rail.
It is a great pleasure to be here with you today.
I would like to speak with you today about London's perspective on high-speed rail. Unfortunately, I am able to address your questions in English only.
I would like to begin with a short introduction to the city of London. We're a regional centre in southwest Ontario. We're Canada's 10th largest urban area, with a population of over 350,000. We're located midway between Windsor and Toronto and we sit at the heart of Ontario and Canada's transportation corridors to the United States. With more than 50% of Canada's trade moving through London by road, rail and air, we have an opportunity to build upon this natural advantage and become an important transportation gateway.
This year MoneySense magazine ranked London as one of the best places to live in Canada, 11th out of 154 communities across the country. We boast a high quality of life and we have a well-educated, highly skilled, diverse, and globally connected community.
We're fortunate to have a number of institutions in our community. We have nationally recognized institutions such as the University of Western Ontario, including the Richard Ivey School of Business, recognized professional schools, teaching hospitals, and internationally recognized research institutions. We're also home to Fanshawe College, the third largest community college in Ontario. It offers the largest number of co-ops of any community college in Canada and this week received almost $16 million in funding for its Centre for Applied Transportation Technologies as part of the joint federal-provincial knowledge infrastructure program. All of these institutions offer strong research and development training and opportunities.
London and southwest Ontario have many significant economic advantages. Before the onset of the current recession, we enjoyed a thriving and diverse manufacturing sector, a rich agricultural base and clusters of world-renowned education and health institutions as well as a network of robust urban and rural communities throughout our region.
London is a logical link in the high-speed rail corridor, because we are home to public and private sector organizations with connections throughout the Quebec City to Windsor corridor, including national and international corporations such as TD Canada Trust, 3M Canada, Pacific & Western Bank, and London Life Insurance Company.
London City Council and its business community have endorsed high-speed rail service from Windsor to Quebec City and submit that, given London's regional significance, there must be a stop in London.
We applaud the governments of Canada, Ontario, and Quebec for launching an update of the feasibility studies done in the 1990s.
London has the fourth busiest VIA Rail station in the country. We used to be the third busiest. We provide easy connections to both urban and rural communities, including eight trains daily to and from Toronto with links to Sarnia and Windsor. While we value this service, it remains far from ideal when compared with the speed and frequency of European or Asian train services and it makes daily commuting more difficult than it needs to be.
London City Council has this week confirmed that London will participate with several other corridor cities in a socio-economic study of the impact of high-speed rail on our community and the other communities on the corridor. Our city, the London Economic Development Corporation, and High Speed Rail Canada are, in fact, commencing a public symposium in London on the benefits of high-speed rail.
The Federation of Canadian Municipalities, FCM, has long supported high-speed rail and recognizes the potential contribution to the long-term competitiveness of Canada's economic infrastructure.
The Lawrence National Centre for Policy and Management at London's prestigious Richard Ivey School of Business, led by Dianne Cunningham, held a transportation policy conference in March 2008 with a variety of senior government officials, experts, and a range of private sector companies to inform policy-makers on the benefits of the Ontario-Quebec continental gateway and trade corridor and the importance of high-speed rail.
The one-day living zone concept was proposed at that conference, a concept whereby individuals can live and commute on a daily basis within a 400-kilometre distance. Participants supported the creation of a process to evaluate who would be part of a high-speed rail corridor and agreed that high-speed rail would increase economic opportunities, enhance quality of life, reduce pressure of mounting population within major cities, promote less use of private vehicles, help smaller cities to grow, and would lead to the removal of passenger trains from current track, leaving them dedicated to a more efficient flow of freight traffic.
London happens to be a member of the Southwest Economic Alliance, or SWEA, which represents the economic interests of 2.5 million people in southwest Ontario. SWEA has identified high-speed rail and rail infrastructure in southwestern Ontario as a top priority.
Now, how could high-speed rail help London and southwestern Ontario? Well, recently London City Council endorsed an economic strategy to further develop London as a trade and transportation hub. The advent of high-speed rail service would strengthen the London and southwestern Ontario economy and open new opportunities for both retention and expansion of economic opportunities in London and the surrounding region. We're strategically located on the Highway 401 corridor near its junction with Highways 402 and 403 and connections to Sarnia and Windsor and the borders beyond.
High-speed rail would relieve congestion on our highways, particularly those around the Greater Toronto Area, reducing the need for highway expansion and leading to reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and improvements in air quality. A high-speed rail service between Windsor and Quebec City would enhance mobility of labour, not just in southwestern Ontario but throughout southern Ontario and Quebec. It would stimulate tourism, open up new markets for trade and investment, and create new high-skill construction jobs.
As was pointed out by the deputy minister to this committee last week, European studies show high-speed rail has the potential to create economic development opportunities for smaller communities, not just larger ones. It will contribute to Canada's global competitiveness. High-speed rail has also proven to be the safest and most reliable form of travel.
With respect to demand, according to Stats Can, there are more than 2,000 daily commutes from London to the GTA. Last month VIA Rail reported almost 35,000 passenger on-offs at our VIA station in our city. We have a potential catchment area around London of over one million people. We welcome the demand studies that are being conducted, and we have just endorsed our participation in similar studies. We favour implementing all sections of high-speed rail service between Windsor and Quebec City in order to amplify and maximize the overall benefits, because we believe the complete corridor will be greater than the sum of its parts.
In summary, we favour high-speed rail rather than higher-speed rail. We favour full implementation of high-speed rail service along the entire corridor rather than a phased approach. We urge the governments of Canada, Quebec, and Ontario to consider the environmental benefit as well as the full socio-economic impact of high-speed rail on the provincial, regional, and, in particular, our local economies in our communities.
Thank you for your consideration. I look forward to your questions.