1370 Ontario St. - Mezzanine, Cleveland, Ohio 44113 • (216) 241-2630 / Fax: (216) 241-6516

Membership
News and Issues
Departments
Secretary-
Treasurers
Information
Communications
FELA
Events
Links
User Info

Protesters block rail line in hopes of halting CP Rail Olympic Spirit Train

(The Canadian Press circulated the following on October 12.)

VAUGHAN, Ontario — Protesters briefly barricaded a railway line north of Toronto Sunday evening and threatened to stop CP Rail's Olympic Spirit Train, but police quickly persuaded them to end their protest after about an hour.

"They listened to reasoning and they're dispersing," said Sgt. Mike Sterchele of York Region Police, the police department responsible for this suburban region north of Toronto.

"We always like to negotiate these things to a peaceful end."

Nobody was arrested.

The group issued a news release earlier Sunday vowing to block the train's route to bring attention to what it called unresolved issues with aboriginals, the poor and the environment related to the staging of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.

"This is an act of solidarity with those First Nations on the West Coast," protest spokesperson Dan Keller told The Canadian Press in a phone interview.

About 20 activists assembled on the railway line and one woman chained herself to the tracks, Keller and police said.

"The ultimate aim of this is of course to stop the Spirit train," Keller said.

But after the protesters dispersed, Keller did not immediately return phone calls.

The train left Port Moody, B.C., on Sept. 21, on a cross-Canada voyage to promote the Games. It spent Saturday in Sudbury, Ont., and was scheduled Sunday to travel south to Mississauga, Ont. It was not clear exactly where the train was at the time the protested started.

CP Rail touted the train as a "mobile ambassador moving the Olympic spirit to Canadian communities."

Keller said the protesters hoped they could stop the train from spreading what he called propaganda about the Games.

Breanne Feigel, a spokeswoman for CP Rail, said the blockade had a minor effect on operations, but she stressed it did not affect the Spirit Train, which arrived in Toronto Sunday.

"Certainly in this case we were extremely concerned as this form of protest poses a serious safety risk."

An event planned Monday in Mississauga, Ont. was to proceed as planned she said.

Opposition to the Olympic Games has been constant since Vancouver was awarded the bid in 2003 but some protest groups say their membership is getting stronger as the Games near.

First Nations activists have been vocal in their opposition to the Games, saying they are being held illegally on traditional territories.

It's an attitude organizers have worked hard to try and counter.

The federal government has signed agreements worth billions of dollars with the four bands whose traditional territories are home to the Games and with whom Olympic organizers have also built official relationships.

Both CP and the Vancouver organizing committee have said they are prepared for protests.

CP Rail, as the official rail freight services supplier to the 2010 Vancouver Games, paid somewhere between $3 million and $15 million for the sponsorship, in exchange for access to tickets and the use of Olympic trademarks for such promotional events.

Monday, October 13, 2008

© 1997-2010 Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen

 


Safety Task Force Hotline
800-306-5414

Decertification Helpline
800-393-2716

DAILY HEADLINES
September 2, 2010

BNSF worker on cell phone killed by Northstar train
Amtrak: Some Virginia service canceled in preparation for Hurricane Earl
SEPTA pilot program to capture, reuse subway energy
Railroad shares up at the close of September 1 trading
NJ Transit pays $267 million to purchase 100 new rail cars
NJ Transit seeks to add WiFi to rail lines, train stations
Texas DOT seeks TIGER II grant for Tower 55 project
Norfolk Southern targets carbon emissions-reduction goal
Progress Rail, NS announce order of four locomotives powered by Caterpillar engines
Firefighters have BNSF tie fire under control
BNSF railroad yard's health impacts studied
French railway faces criticism in US for WWII role
Steamtown's Railfest on the right track
RRB: Summary of annual financial report to Congress
Credit for military service under the Railroad Retirement Act
Railroad Retirement Board 2010 informational conferences

More Headlines


Enter your e-mail address to receive BLET news updates.

Subscribe  Unsubscribe