FPAC has long been an advocate of running rights as a more fundamental structural solution to the lack of competition in the industry. Running rights would allow one railway to run over the line of another railway at rates for that portion of the trip that would be set by the Canadian Transportation Agency. There's already a precedent for running rights in certain situations within the act. We believe that ultimately that would be probably the most practical and best solution to create the incentives and the ability for real competition.
We've seen that there are some provisions within the act that have actually worked to create competition. One that works quite well is interswitching, where the agency sets interswitching rates for lines within 30 kilometres of one another. This has created effective competition in major urban areas. We know these kinds of provisions can work and we believe that running rights for rural areas is probably the most practical. So you could negotiate with one railway or the other and you would effectively allow access over the lines. I think that's really, for us, probably the best solution.
The other possibility is within the act already. There are provisions for what are called competitive line rates. This is a provision that has never really been effective. The railways have refused. It allows the railways to compete for each other's traffic, but they've never really been inclined to use it in practice. There are legislative modifications that could be made to make those provisions more attractive, perhaps, but our history with those is that the railways have avoided using them, and it's fairly discretionary to the railways. So we're less convinced that this would be effective in the long run.