I just want to continue that line of thought about partnerships.
Right now in Whitehorse and St. John's—not big urban centres—they have some buses. Municipalities are saying they can't afford to run all of these buses. There are areas in Whitehorse, for example, that need more bus services, but the municipality does not have enough money to circle the neighbourhoods.
The neighbourhood of Mount Pearl said they too need buses but they can't afford them, so they would love to partner with both the provincial and federal governments—especially the federal government, because the federal government right now is not at the table—to work with them. They are doing the planning. They want the federal government to provide some seed money to help them plan, because they don't have the funds to plan. They would like the federal government to be involved so that after the planning they can say, “Hey, this is what we need. Which part should you folks pay for? Is it buying the buses, fixing the buses, or whatever? What part should the province pay for, and what part should the municipalities pay for?” They want to have that kind of dialogue. Right now there is no table, desk, or forum for that dialogue to take place.
You can call this strategy a plan or policy, it doesn't matter, but there has to be some way for this dialogue to occur. Right now there's a huge vacuum, which is probably why 52% of the public said in your survey that the state of public transit should be better. Fewer than half of your members rate the state of public transit infrastructure as adequate or better because of this vacuum.
Is there anything wrong? Do you not think it's time for the federal government to be involved in that way?
I also have a follow-up question on funding.