To the extent that it is “a charge”, you are correct, and that is why a new remedy is introduced in clause 3 of the bill. A distinction has to be drawn between the price, which is the amount billed by the railway to transport a good from point A to point B, and “a change”, which represents everything the railway will build beyond that base price.
As regards charges, the remedy introduced is that provided for in clause 3 of the bill. That remedy enables shippers to challenge those charges. To the extent that the agency is of the view that “the charge” is unreasonable or that the terms associated with the charges are unreasonable, it will compel the railway to change its tariff. That decision will apply to the industry as a whole. That is the essence of the remedy provided for in clause 3 of the bill.
Clause 7 of the bill concerns arbitration. It must be understood that arbitration enables a shipper immediately, or a group of shippers in the future, to tell the railway that, apart from the charges, they do not agree on the transportation contract, the package that will enable the shipper to transport its goods from point A to point B. That includes the prices, charges and terms of service. A shipper may consider that, to transport its goods from point A to point B, it would like the railway to bill it at such and such a rate for such and such a service and to be able to pay a given amount for incidental charges.
The arbitrator will have to examine the offers of the two parties and select one of them. If it chooses the shipper's offer, that offer becomes the transportation contract that applies between the parties for one year, in the case of an individual arbitration, or for five years in the case of a joint arbitration.
It would not be possible to apply that decision to the industry as a whole because the decision is specific to the group of shippers filing the application. Such a decision will in fact be specific to each of the shippers that file the application. The shipper will say that it is transporting goods from point A to point B, stating the distance and volume of those goods, and that it needs this service with these charges. The application of this decision to the entire industry would not be legally possible.