Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
Witnesses, I want to thank you for your testimony. But with apologies to the other witnesses, I do want to direct my questioning to the Canadian Trucking Alliance. I really have no choice, as I represent a riding, greater Moncton, that has vast trucking interests, with Robert Irving's Midland Transport and Wes Armour's Armour Transportation Systems, and not far away, the McCains, so there is quite a culture of trucking and transportation where I come from.
So not surprisingly, the issue of the enhanced driver's licence and smart cards has in fact been a front-page story. The Province of New Brunswick recently decided against jumping into the fray with respect to the enhanced driver's licence and smart cards and is waiting for a regional approach, much as the maritime provinces have always acted in unison in some measure. HST, the harmonized sales tax, is a good example.
I guess what I'm asking you, Mr. Bradley and Mr. Lennox, first of all, is whether it's a doable and laudable goal to go to the enhanced driver's licence and smart cards. We know that the Province of Quebec has recently concluded an arrangement. British Columbia is testing it. Manitoba appears to be on the verge of coming out with it.
I'm struck, Mr. Bradley, by what you said, in what was perhaps the most quotable quote of the meeting, that you have dealt with so many ministers responsible for the border in your time, it makes you think no one is actually in charge.
When I see the patchwork quilt on this small issue—which should be resolvable—and I see the differing results and the fact that really only one province is ready to go, Manitoba, and I see the maritime provinces, for whom, as Mr. Keddy says, transportation across the border is incredibly important, it strikes me there's a role here for either your organization, that is, the private sector—and obviously I think you're going to tell me you're working on that to help the provinces—or maybe yet another department, such as the intergovernmental affairs secretariat, to help the Government of Canada facilitate the provinces concluding these deals.
I know that my friends from the Bloc would think that the Quebec government is stella inter pares, and probably better than other provincial governments. I think all governments in Canada are pretty well equal, and if Quebec can do it and Manitoba can do it, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia can do it.
So I guess the question is, have you canvassed your members and lobbied provincial governments on issues with respect to the privacy concerns regarding smart cards?
Also, the response from my provincial government has been such that if one applies for these, in most cases, the program is almost as onerous as applying for a passport. So why bother doing it? The only result is going to be a modest cost to the consumer. The average price is $30 to $50. A passport is, what, $87?
Second, have you impressed upon the federal government the need to educate, cajole, or help the provinces achieve this goal, which I think—and you can disagree with me on this, or expand on it—would be a small measure that would improve or facilitate the situation at the border?