The federal government has directed Alto to consider an additional high-speed rail stop in Kingston, Ont., in a potential major change to the route after feedback from residents.

Transport Minister Steven MacKinnon said Monday he was “acting on what we heard” in public consultations spanning three months in roughly two-dozen communities this year.

“This is a strong indication of preference for one route over another,” he told reporters in Kingston, while stressing that no final decision has been made.

The project has garnered vocal opposition in rural parts of Eastern Ontario and in Mirabel, Que., where critics say the line would slice through their properties and force expropriations.

The eighth stop on the corridor would likely add time to the trip and costs to the project, raising questions about the budget as well as passenger and revenue projections.

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So far, the cost estimate sits between $60 billion and $90 billion, though complex rail projects have a reputation for blowing through budget caps.

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The line would see trains running between Toronto and Quebec City on dedicated electric tracks at speeds breaching 300 km/h.


Click to play video: 'PQ pledges to halt high speed rail project if elected'


PQ pledges to halt high speed rail project if elected


Alto, the Crown corporation overseeing the effort, said MacKinnon instructed it to produce a plan assessing a southern route option between Ottawa and Peterborough, Ont., that includes a “potential stop in Kingston.” The possible stop would connect with the Via Rail station in that city.


It would reduce travel times between Kingston and Toronto by roughly half to about 90 minutes and allow the vast majority of residents between Peterborough and Ottawa to drive to a station in less than half an hour, according to Alto.

Construction of the first phase of the roughly 1,000-kilometre rail line is set to kick off in 2029 or 2030, linking Montreal and Ottawa in an effective test case for what would be a massive infrastructure project intended to transform rail travel in Canada’s most densely populated region.

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So far, the federal government has mandated seven stops: Toronto, Peterborough, Ont., Ottawa, Laval, Que., Montreal, Trois-Rivières, Que., and Quebec City.

The project has garnered backlash from a grassroots coalition of farmers and small-town residents as well as the federal Conservatives and the Parti Québécois. Critics say the rail corridor would cleave communities, prompt hundreds of land expropriations and offer locals few benefits while costing taxpayers billions of dollars.

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