Thank you for the question.
First of all, the current work-rest rules came out of the Hinton disaster. It always comes out of a disaster in rail. They were very, should we say, inadequate. The rest being left to collective bargaining, to allow companies to have unique features. Of course, as you know, the company's method of collective bargaining is to have a back-to-work law—and it doesn't matter if it's Conservatives or Liberals—it's what happens. Every time we go to collective bargaining, that's the issue and it isn’t dealt with.
Parliament has dealt with it. In the amendments to the Rail Safety Act, the requirement is to have a fatigue management system based on science. I congratulate the government for supporting and passing it because it's the most definitive statement I've ever seen on fatigue management in Canada. That's why we're urging to move it quicker.
On the second part, we are working with the department now. A team has been put together, at the behest of the minister, to try to address the worst components of the current work-rest rules. I'm hopeful that they won't in fact eliminate some of these 18- to 20-hour days and get something totally unreasonable at 16, which violates fatigue science, but the minister is moving this forward and we hope that will be in place.
In a funny way, Parliament has acted. You understood. You did your job, and we thank you for doing it. Delays are just unacceptable. So, first the committee here could perhaps recommend that it happens. Second, another amendment put forward by myself and supported by all the parties, was to give the committee a chance to review, at its own behest, all regulations regarding safety, and the committee read that as security as well.
I suggest that in a couple of years or 18 months, you have us all back and ask us specifically how it is going. That's your ability, to actually keep a finger on the pulse.