We very much supported that provision, but one thing we always have to keep in mind is that if the agency needs to investigate, it means it's too late. The failure has probably happened.
If they have the proper data, they can start to see when the supply chain starts to become an issue and they can maybe step in and smooth it out so it's not so bad, but we need to have that kind of insight. We need to have that information to know that this week, we're starting to see red flags around what's happening in the rail network and we need to do something. We need to be able to go to the railways and we need the rails to speak to the customers so they can start to plan: “Okay, we're going to have a problem in the next couple of months.” That did not happen last year.
If they need to investigate a catastrophe or a crisis, it's too late for us. We need to avoid the crisis in the first place. We need to be forward-thinking. We need to be thinking about how we prevent this. Data is a huge example of how we can do it. The U.S. has their data, but I think we can be much better in Canada. We can be much, much better. We don't have to look to them for an example of it. We can set our own regime now. Bill C-49 gave us the ability to do that.