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As of May 2022, she was the most successful Canadian to play on the show and ranks 5th in all-time regular season wins. [14] [15] May 12 – An official death toll from COVID-19 in Canada exceeds 40,000 people since the start of the pandemic.
Matamata Intermediate is the town's co-educational state intermediate school, [34] [35] with a roll of 432. [36] There are two co-educational state primary schools: Matamata Primary School, [37] [38] with a roll of 506; [39] and Firth School, [40] with a roll of 231. [41] The motto for Firth School is E Tipu E Rea, which translates as Grow and ...
July 2 – Line T2 of the Bursa tramway opens. [64] July 3 – Opening of the initial route of the Cairo Light Rail Transit. [65] July 6 – Île-de-France tramway Line 13 opens. [66] July 14 – Line 2 of the Kolkata Metro is extended from Phoolbagan to Sealdah. [67] July 17 – Line 1 of the West Midlands Metro is extended from Birmingham ...
The Montreal Metro is Canada's second-busiest rail transit system. Drawing inspiration from the Paris Métro , it uses rubber-tired metro technology, the only such system in Canada. The 69.2-kilometre (43.0 mi) system has 68 stations on four lines, which serve the north, east, and central portions of the Island of Montreal , as well as the ...
Canada uses 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 in) standard gauge track for the majority of its railway system. The exceptions to this are small lines isolated from the main North American rail network used in resource industries such as mining or forestry, some of which are narrow gauge , and the streetcar and heavy-rail subway lines of the Toronto ...
Tshiuetin Rail began operations on December 1, 2005, with the conclusion of an agreement between the three owners of Tshiuetin Rail and the owners of the Quebec North Shore and Labrador Railway (QNSX), Rail Enterprises Incorporated and Iron Ore Company of Canada. Under this agreement, finalized in the fall of 2005, QNSX sold its Menihek ...
The following is a list of all light rail systems in North America, ranked by ridership. Daily figures for American and Canadian light rail systems are "average weekday unlinked passenger trips" (where transfers between lines are counted as two separate passenger "boardings" or "trips"), unless otherwise indicated.
GO's other five lines were opened between 1974 and 1982, significantly expanding the rail network from 86 to 332 kilometres long, and from 16 to 43 stations. To that point, all of GO's rail services ran on tracks mostly owned by the two major freight railways of Canada: Canadian National (CN) and Canadian Pacific (CP).