Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank each one of the participants for attending and providing us with the input today.
I want to remind everyone at this table that our government has consulted extensively on this issue. In fact Mr. Jean, the parliamentary secretary, was in my area this past summer going to many of these municipalities checking out transportation difficulties and the rail problems we're facing. He's also been in Alberta and Montreal, I believe.
My experience is in the lower mainland. One thing we shouldn't forget is the fact that Mr. Julian's riding, which includes New Westminster, and also Ms. Fisher's community are both part of the Pacific Gateway strategy. Those of you who followed the Pacific Gateway announcement this past week know that traffic through this area is only going to get busier. Hopefully the transportation of goods and services through that corridor is going to make the whole area and Canada more prosperous. But it's also going to impose much tougher conditions on those trying to transport goods through the Pacific Gateway.
First, I would like to make it very clear that while our railways contribute significantly to the Canadian economy, they also have to earn a social licence, as does industry as a whole. That doesn't only affect transportation; it affects many other areas, such as the environment.
One of the concerns I had in listening to the participants, specifically to Mr. Allen and Ms. Fisher, was their reference to the fact that the consultations, which took place with the various railways, ended up in failure. Again that's where the whole issue of social licence comes up.
Could the two of you expand a bit more on the process that you attempted to go through in trying to address these noise problems directly with the railways? What was it that led to the failure of those consultations?