I'd support this amendment. It provides an effective balance for what is clearly enunciated here.
It's been a problem. We've now talked about it on a couple of amendments. We have a problem between basically giving no play to the public sector and talking about competition and market forces as being the only route to take.
There is the rare exception and a very strict definition that would be the only exception in terms of public transportation. I refer back to the national transportation policy, which we are in effect amending. It talks about “competition and market forces...whenever possible”. It talks about the economic regulation of carriers and modes of transportation occurring in services and regions. It talks about transportation being recognized as a key to regional economic development.
Mr. Bell's amendment talks to what is already in the national transportation policy. It does add the element of the environment, which is something. It is fair to say almost all Canadians would welcome this committee's adding it in as an element that has to be taken into consideration for policy purposes.
The amendment is very helpful. It talks about economic outcomes, as the current policy does. It talks about social outcomes, which the current policy does. It doesn't use the exact same words, but it is clearly referenced in the current transportation policy. It then adds an environmental component that we already adopted when we adopted the initial amendments from Monsieur Laframboise. It is very consistent with what we have put in place so far in this clause-by-clause analysis.
If we don't put it in, we end up with a contradiction between a policy enunciation that talks about the environment and the role transportation plays and the current clause that says public intervention only occurs in a very strict and limited type of situation.
I don't think it's where most Canadians are at. I certainly don't think it's where Canadians would want us to go. I think this amendment is very helpful.