Thanks, Mr. Chair.
Folks, I want to go back to the Auditor General's report, and I want to go back to the human capacity, the capacity challenges inside the department. Here's what the Auditor General says, and it's in stark contrast with some of the things I'm hearing.
First, the Auditor General said that in 2009 Transport Canada estimated it needed 20 system auditors to audit each railway once every three years. Then the Auditor General says they have 10 qualified inspectors, on top of which they now have to oversee 39 additional non-federal railways. The Auditor General then says that Transport Canada doesn't know whether its current staff of inspectors—get this—“has the required skills and competencies” to do their jobs.
Then the Auditor General says, and I quote, “Inspectors and managers were not trained on a timely basis”. Then the Auditor General says that Transport Canada can't even warrant that inspectors are objective and independent, that they come mainly from federal railways. So what are Canadians to make of this very detailed, brutal report on the state of rail safety? VIA Rail, as I said earlier—I'd like to get a response from VIA—was not audited once in three fiscal years and carries four million passengers a year.
I'm no fan of the Republican administration, but I like one line from the United States, which is “trust but verify”. At the end of the day, most Canadians believe the ultimate responsibility for rail safety is with the federal government, not the partnership between the regulator and the regulated manifested in SMS, not the regulated body, not VIA Rail, not CN, not CP, not any of these other railways. I think most Canadians believe it is the responsibility of the Government of Canada to regulate and make sure that rail is safe.
What are Canadians to make of this factual, objective third-party report?
Maybe we can start with VIA Rail.