Do you think it would be beneficial for the federal government to establish a policy that would say this is a corridor--the triangle, as you've said--that moves a phenomenal number of people, whether it's by highway, by air with WestJet, Porter, Air Canada, the Island Airport or Pearson, plus VIA Rail and, now, with the possibility of high-speed rail? Should there really be an overarching strategy to say that here is what we ultimately want the modal split to be and also what percentage it is, 80%, 20% or 5%, whatever percentage it is? Then we would look at the amount of federal money that is allocated accordingly and say that this, ideally, is how we should go about doing it.
Instead, what I'm seeing now is that there seems to be a policy vacuum and that whatever comes along happens, whether it's the Island Airport, Pearson, rail, or high-speed. I do not see an overarching strategy. Correct me if I'm wrong. If there is an overarching strategy, I wouldn't mind seeing it and having a good discussion about it, because how we move people here....
These are very lucrative flights for Air Canada. It makes a lot of money. If that actually declines significantly because of various factors, whether it's competition from the Island Airport, plus high-speed rail or whatever, then what it means is that smaller communities could lose their flights. Air Canada would be saying that it no longer has enough funds to subsidize the much longer, smaller, money-losing flights to these small communities. You cut off the flights to these communities and they have no access; it's a real problem for Canada, as vast a country as ours is.