I'm Tamara Rudge. I'm the director general for surface transportation policy at Transport Canada.
Currently, regulated interswitching is at 30 kilometres. That provides shippers with a radius from the interchange point with guaranteed access to another carrier at a rate regulated by the Canadian Transportation Agency without an application. This means it's easy to use and they have cost certainty. Also, shippers indicate that it provides meaningful leverage when they're negotiating contracts with the railways.
We have another piece called long-haul interswitching. That was introduced in 2018 as a competitive option for shippers outside of that 30 kilometres. This measure hasn't been used. There have been concerns from shippers about the measure, because you have to apply to the agency, so you have uncertainty as you apply and they will determine the cost. Then you have to take that once you've applied. It doesn't give them the same type of leverage as the normal interswitching does.
During the work of the supply chain task force, they put forward a recommendation on interswitching to extend the distance. Therefore, in the budget implementation act we are mimicking an approach that was taken from 2014 to 2017 to increase the limit to 160 kilometres for a pilot of 18 months to gather more data.