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Greyhound 91Ƶdestroys91Ƶ Alberta senior91Ƶs Christmas

Caroline Hurlbert may not spend Christmas with family in Revelstoke this year
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Ross Hurlbert holds a photo of his mother Caroline Hurlbert with pictures of his roommate91Ƶs family are in the background. Usually all of them spend Christmas together. However, this Christmas may be different (Liam Harrap/Revelstoke Review).

A senior on a fixed income says she will be spending Christmas alone due to cancellation of Greyhound bus services.

91ƵI have no way of getting to Revelstoke,91Ƶ says Caroline Hurlbert, 76.

While Caroline lives in Medicine Hat, Alberta, her only son lives in Revelstoke.

91ƵI depend on Greyhound to visit family,91Ƶ says Hurlbert. She gave up her driving license four years ago and no longer can afford a vehicle.

91ƵThis is a reality for seniors with a fixed income.91Ƶ

Greyhound Canada announced in July that it would be ending its bus and freight services in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. Only one route will still available in B.C. and that91Ƶs Vancouver to Seattle. The changes will take effect at the end of this month.

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The company says the move was necessary due to declining ridership. Greyhound has been operating in the province since 1929, but says ridership has dropped 46 per cent since 2010.

91ƵIt91Ƶs not a good thing Greyhound will no longer come to Revelstoke,91Ƶ says Hurlbert91Ƶs son, Ross.

Ross works in the meat department at Southside Market. He would go to Alberta for Christmas, but says his mother won91Ƶt let him.

91ƵShe worries about me driving on that highway.91Ƶ

According to , there were more than 64,000 vehicle crashes in B.C. that caused injuries or deaths in 2016, of which 6,900 were in Revelstoke, Golden, Kelowna, Kamloops and Nelson areas.

In the last month there have been 30 motor vehicle collisions in the Revelstoke area, said an Oct. 4 RCMP release.

While Caroline couldn91Ƶt travel to Revelstoke last Christmas due to health problems, the prior three holidays to that she has. She used to spend Christmas with her other son in Medicine Hat, but he died in 2014. Her first husband died in 1981 and Caroline says she raised her children alone. Though she remarried, her second husband died in 2010.

91ƵI91Ƶm alone,91Ƶ says Caroline.

And not only does her son live in Revelstoke, but the roommates who more-or-less 91Ƶadopted91Ƶ him when he moved in Revelstoke 10 years ago are like a great big family.

91ƵThere91Ƶs so much love here,91Ƶ Ross said. 91ƵAnd Greyhound took that away.91Ƶ

Ideally, Caroline says she would like to live in Revelstoke, but cannot afford it. The city has become too expensive.

There are other options that Caroline could use to get to Revelstoke, but they aren91Ƶt cheap. She could take a shuttle from Medicine Hat to Calgary Airport and fly to Kelowna, but that costs roughly $750.

91ƵI can91Ƶt afford that,91Ƶ says Caroline.

Last time, she paid $265 to take Greyhound.

The impacts of Greyhound leaving Revelstoke go far beyond the mother and son.

91ƵThis cancellation will mostly effect low income people,91Ƶ says Cathy Girling at Community Connections in Revelstoke. She works with the local homeless outreach program.

Although there is no emergency homeless shelter in Revelstoke, Girling says they could put homeless individuals on a Greyhound and send them to a shelter in Salmon Arms or Vernon.

91ƵWe can no longer do that. And there currently is no Plan B,91Ƶ says Girling.

91ƵThis is a big concern.91Ƶ

Greyhound is also important for the Revelstoke Woman91Ƶs Shelter. The shelter provides a 30 day stay for women and their children fleeing abuse. Sometimes they91Ƶre from Revelstoke, sometimes they aren91Ƶt.

91ƵFor example, we may have a lady from Calgary fleeing to family in Vancouver. Revelstoke is the layover and the first transition house from Calgary. She may have arrived here on Greyhound,91Ƶ says Lynne Loeppky executive director of the Revelstoke Women91Ƶs Shelter.

Loeppky worries women will get stranded.

91ƵIf women get here, how will they move on?91Ƶ

In the past, the women91Ƶs shelter would provide a bus ticket. If the women weren91Ƶt local, the bus was a way to get home, somewhere safe, or a chance to escape abuse in Revelstoke.

91ƵWe don91Ƶt know what we91Ƶre going to do now,91Ƶ says Loeppky.

There are two other buses that travel west to Kelowna and Kamloops from Revelstoke. One is a bus, which leaves on Tues. and Wed. and is primarily for non-emergency medical appointments.

If there is space on the 17-person bus, anyone can get a ride. It91Ƶs $5 and subsidized by the City of Revelstoke, B.C. Transport, and Interior Health. However, there91Ƶs no room for luggage. Just whatever can fit on your lap. For more information call R Taxi at 250-837-4000.

The other option is the . Currently they charge $150 one-way per adult from Revelstoke to the Kelowna Airport. By comparison, if booked a few weeks in advance a Greyhound ticket to Kelowna costs less than $30.

The Revelstoke Review couldn91Ƶt find any transportation options heading east to Calgary. Or at least safe and reliable ones.

91ƵMy fear is people will hitch hike,91Ƶ says Loeppky

Not only can hitch hiking be dangerous, it91Ƶs also illegal.

Another B.C. bus company, named Silver City Stagelines is planning to start a service between Nelson and Kelowna.

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However, many towns across western Canada will be left isolated and cut-off.

91ƵI don91Ƶt understand why our federal government isn91Ƶt doing anything,91Ƶ says Caroline.

91ƵPeople like me will be screwed.91Ƶ


 


liam.harrap@revelstokereview.com

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