Thank you.
As a person who has owned a business, been in business for a number of years, and used air service regularly, I’m a person who knows that there “ain’t no free lunch”. If there is a cost, someone has to pay it.
You talked about subrogation—I'm sorry, I'm not familiar with the word, and I'll have to get my dictionary out—but fundamentally you're saying that the insurance companies will find somebody else to pay. As a business person, I know that if the costs increase to the airlines, then I, as a consumer, am going to see significant increases in costs for my travel, because somebody has to pay the bill.
Effectively you're saying that all of us are going to have to share that responsibility. Air Canada is a publicly traded company. On the stock market, it means that my stock is going to be worth less if I own shares in Air Canada or WestJet. My shares are likely to go down....
How is this going to help business in the long run?