In 2013-14, they cut back too much. At CP at that time, there was a fellow named Hunter Harrison. He started the whole process of making sure that their capital was utilized to the utmost. That changed the way railways use their capital and their investment, but it was at the cost of service. The shareholders were very happy about that response, but it did not serve Canada very well.
You can't look at Canada in the same way that you look at the United States. When you have two independent railways, they have obligations and a lot of rights in Canada, but what comes with that is a lot of responsibility. They have a responsibility to service Canadians, especially people who only have access to one shipper. They've somehow focused away from that.
Even in the data that they were presenting today, there was nothing about “here's what we're seeing for demand”. They know what we're demanding. We need 5,000 cars a week. They know the plan. They didn't mention how many cars. They just told you what they delivered. There was no agriculture language in that at all with regard to delivering cars.
I think we have a long way to go. Two years ago, CN did cut—from what I remember—2,000 employees and several locomotives. They did very well last year. They supplied transport for what we had to ship, but there wasn't much economic activity.
On the other hand, last year we missed on CP. As the president of a farm group, I was irate when I turned around in April and started talking to farmers and there were a lot.... Southwestern Manitoba and southeastern Saskatchewan were hit particularly hard. CP was around 40% to 50% all winter last year, and no one said anything. They got away with it last year.
I kind of feel bad for CN this year, but it has to stop. They don't understand.