Again, as I said in my opening comments, one of the challenges in Atlantic Canada is low density and reliance on a few providers, and those providers also then sometimes being heavily dependent upon one or two users. I think this is an ongoing issue that limits choice and capacity.
We do have, especially in New Brunswick, a number of short-lines that are important connections, which allow trade with the United States, for example.
I don't have any specific recent issues that I can bring to your attention where we are hearing about challenges. Certainly in the past, every time you were having to make connections from one line to another, that's where some of these inefficiencies came in, as Mr. Sharma noted. That's typically the same challenge we have heard in Atlantic Canada in the past. I don't know whether over the last three years those issues have become better or worse.
There has been a lot of concern around maintaining some of those short-lines, because once you lose that line, a number of businesses may be impacted, even if it's just due to the closure of one facility. Again, that dependence and the public impacts of that are still an issue for some of those lines.