No, no. In every region you have one player who'll set the price and the others simply follow in a micro-second, as you know, Mr. Taylor.
Bloomberg, I would suggest, you may perhaps also want to look at. I'm not exactly sure how you get your information. It's far more vast than my poor little computer here. Platts might be the other means of doing this.
This brought us to a resolution on this committee some years ago as to being able to provide an independent, transparent oil monitoring agency that would not only look at the relative prices, as you in Ontario do and others do with respect to border cities, but in fact looking at wholesale prices, rack to refinery, tank terminals or refinery racks, comparing one to the other.
I want to ask you this. If Toronto has, for instance, a wholesale price established on Friday of 65.3¢, Ottawa 65.2¢, and there is no variation in the wholesale market, where and how would you propose we restore competition in this industry so that Canadians can once again be assured that we're being provided competitively priced gasoline--and our impact from the United States.
You've talked about utilization rates being very high, 95% to 98%. One would argue that the number of mergers that have taken place under the watchful eye of this Competition Act, made in 1986, left us in a situation where we are seeing the potential for hazards that cause Canadians to have to pay and reach deeper into their pockets for months on end. How do you propose to break up that monopoly in price that we see at four o'clock every day, which consumers pay and which everybody thinks, miraculously, they know what the price is going to be the next day because we can predict all the other values to a t?