High-speed rail project runs into rural opposition
Posted Mar 4, 2026 04:00:07 AM.
MONTREAL — Each day, Gord Boulton traverses the forests, lakes and clearings that house his hunting and fishing outfitting business.
A handful of camps dot the vast property, inhabited by deer, wild turkeys, beavers and bass. But Boulton can already picture that pristine scene punctured by a 300 km/h train barrelling down a track that could run through his property, severing it.
“It’s just going to roar right through the countryside and destroy it and bisect communities,” said Boulton, whose business revolves around the 1,000-hectare plot — about 1,400 soccer fields — in Battersea, Ont., northeast of Kingston.
Boulton was referring to a proposed high-speed rail line between Toronto and Quebec City. And he counts himself among the rural Ontarians and Quebecers behind a growing backlash to the project.
“I get people every day calling, and crying,” he said, a few weeks after launching a Facebook group called Save South Frontenac, the township where he lives.
“It was just shocking that this potentially could completely flip my life over and basically shut my business down and everything that my family enjoys doing.”
He’s not alone. A grassroots coalition of farmers, small-town residents and municipal councillors say the rail corridor would cleave their communities, prompt hundreds of land expropriations and offer locals few benefits while costing taxpayers billions of dollars.
In eastern Ontario, at least five townships and municipalities have passed resolutions opposing a would-be southern route to the line. At least one has come out against the other, more northerly option.
The Ontario Federation of Agriculture and Quebec’s Union des producteurs agricoles have called for suspension of the project. Several Facebook groups opposing it or giving voice to residents’ concerns have cropped up, with three of them garnering more than 14,000 members in total.
Alto, the Crown corporation overseeing the project, is weighing two possible corridors for eastern Ontario. One traces a direct line between Ottawa and Peterborough and the other arcs along a more southerly path between the two cities.
Construction of the first phase of the 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.
The seven stops mandated by the federal government are: Toronto, Peterborough, Ottawa, Laval, Que., Montreal, Trois-Rivières, Que., and Quebec City.
Caroline Stephenson of Madoc, Ont., worries that the walled-off, dedicated track will block country roads and create longer, bottleneck-prone drives for commuters and first responders, as the high train speeds rule out at-grade crossings.
“The school bus that picks up my neighbour’s kids is going to be longer. Every single movement that we make is going to be more difficult,” she said.
In Quebec, a long line of tractors rumbled through the streets of Mirabel north of Montreal last week as farmers protested the potential disruption to their lives and livelihoods.
“If your land is separated by a railroad … you’ve got to go five kilometres, 10 or more to get to your field on the other side,” Stéphane Alary, a regional president of Quebec’s farmers union.
A lack of convenience and even safety for slow-going tractor drivers on busy roads near Canada’s second-largest city would pose a big problem for those represented by Alary, who called the railway a “catastrophe” in the making.
Faced with severed fields, many farmers will feel compelled to sell part of their plots to Ottawa, he added.
“There’s a cost.”
Alto has said the benefits of the project range from greater economic output, job growth and tourism revenue to emissions reduction and safer travel.
The rail line would make for a three-hour trip between Toronto and Montreal and less than one hour between Montreal and Ottawa — the first leg set for construction, with shovels expected to hit the ground in less than five years.
CEO Martin Imbleau acknowledged this year that some expropriations will be necessary, though he declined to give an estimate.
The aim is to have “willing sellers,” he told reporters in January. “Negotiate directly with the landowners, with the proper consultation and being very transparent.
“Expropriation is a loaded word, because it’s frustrating. Hopefully it’s not going to be a tool that is the predominant one,” he said.