Thank you very much.
I feel like my colleague Mr. Fraser. There are many things I would like to ask, but I am going to go to you, Mr. Streiner, and circle back to some of the comments you made in your opening remarks.
You said that perhaps the most significant rail-related change in Bill C-49 is replacement of the CTA's authority to set interswitching distances beyond 30 kilometres and of the competitive line rate provisions with long-haul interswitching. I think it connects quite well with what Mr. Al-Katib said in terms of the angst around interswitching. This would be one of the issues that is raised with me time and time again when I'm meeting with stakeholders around the long-haul interswitching, so some of my questions are based on the conversations with them.
For you, Mr. Streiner, I first want to ask about long-haul interswitching orders and reasonable direction of the traffic. In the bill, clause 136.1 states that an LHI order should be applicable to the “nearest” interchange “in the reasonable direction of the...traffic”. In southern Manitoba, for example, traffic is often moving north to an interchange in Winnipeg, before it moves somewhere down into the lower 48 states. There are, however, closer interchanges at the border, but these are not of the same size or efficiency as the Winnipeg interchanges.
Does Bill C-49 allow for an LHI order to have traffic still move to Winnipeg even if there's a closer but less efficient interchange?