Just very quickly, Mr. Chair, I would like to say that I call it more of a fear. I am afraid that's exactly what will take place. From my perspective, we have a regional imbalance across the country right now in transport, infrastructure, communities, etc., and I think the government has shown how important infrastructure is because they've linked it with transport.
I would like to see, on a regional basis, a subcommittee being short, sharp, and to the point, to investigate specific things, whether they happen to be in Quebec with border crossings, or Windsor, or British Columbia with the Pacific gateway. We would form a subcommittee on those bases, on those very important issues that are going to tie the whole country together, and would have the subcommittee meet for a very short period of time, maybe four meetings, depending on the case. And within a one-week or two-week period--and it would have to do double workloads, and I think we're all going to have to do so on this committee—it would come back to the committee regarding particular regional issues or particular general issues they can task on, and deal with them.
I don't see how we can separate transport and infrastructure. I always wondered how that could be done. I don't think it was done effectively in past governments, to be frank.