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LETTER: Debris along Niagara rail corridor is shameful

'This is not what Canada should look like,' a reader writes
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Niagara-on-the-Lake Local received the following letter to the editor from reader Lidija Biro.

The recent announcement of $6.8 million to improve public transit across the Niagara Region is of course welcomed news.

Now, can some of that be put to improving train travel, signage, and cleaning up the debris along the rail corridor?

I used the GO train from Niagara Falls to Union Station last week (April 20, 2024) and was excited that such a service was available so my husband did not have to drive me to Pearson Airport from where I travelled to London (UK).

However, those feelings quickly dissipated due to the following:

1. The train does not advance to the charming station house in Niagara Falls but stops roughly 200 yards away from where people are waiting. There is no signage to indicate that the train will not pull up to the station requiring travellers to figure it out independently and then run for the train at the last minute.

2. The train that day brought a vast number of visitors to Niagara Falls (from Toronto, I assume), many who may have been new immigrants and tourists. My husband noted that if he had been a tourist on that train and left to scramble along a litter strewn narrow pathway (with no signage or building in sight), he would have been horrified as to what kind of place he had come. Both of us have travelled extensively in Europe by rail and public transit and even in the smallest of towns we never encountered anything like this.

3. According to the published GO Train schedule the departure time for this train should have been 12:04 p.m. but the announced departure by train staff indicated 11:58 making me wonder if everyone got on the train as intended. The only other train to Union Station that day was in the evening.

4. As the train pulled out of Niagara Falls heading to St. Cathqarines, the rail corridor made me ashamed. This is not what Canada should look like. The debris strewn everywhere was disgusting. Trash from many impromptu homeless encampments (which is an on going problem beyond public transportation), to blown-in litter, to the dumping of tires, appliances, mattresses, and plastic everywhere was unreal.

This is not only unsightly, but harmful to wildlife and ground water.

I just helped to organize an Earth Day event in Niagara-on-the-Lake so what I saw through the train window was extremely distressing. We need to do better!

YOU NEED TO DO BETTER!

From young to old, Niagara citizens, care about the environment and the health and appearance of our towns and cities.

Sincerely,
Lidija Biro
NOTL Resident