Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you very much to the panel for a very exhaustive report. I'm struck by the mandate you had from the minister. You were tasked with looking at how Canada Post Corporation can provide quality services to Canadians at a reasonable price. I think you looked at all the possible options in a very quantitative and robust way, but therein lies the rub because, of course, what is the mandate of Canada Post? It is a mandate to provide a universal service, so there are built-in constraints that no private business would have. I'm sure that was striking you as you were going through that study.
In brief, Canada Post started as a service department of the government. It was fully paid for because it was recognized as being a service that all Canadians needed, and it was a nation-building service that could contact every citizen and provide facility of communication and trade. It was changed to a crown corporation in 1981, but even then it was lopsided, with the pension still being part of the public service.
I can just imagine how awkward it was to manage that during that time, but we had a huge lettermail volume, so it masked the problem. However, any real business has to be nimble in reacting to a changing business environment. What we've had with email and so on is basically an Uberization of Canada Post. I really want to put that out there.
Knowing that is really the current mandate of Canada Post, even if you were to apply all the seven cost-cutting measures, is that enough to save Canada Post?