While the existing exclusions included in the bill we think are very important and need to be maintained, they do not address the issue of U.S. reciprocity in the three prairie provinces. To the point made earlier by my colleague at CP, there is still an opportunity for railroads to come into those three prairie provinces and to take business away from the Canadian rail network. I want to make the point that if a shipper wants to ship to the U.S., we do that day in and day out, and we're prepared to continue to do that, but the rate we do that at should be commercially negotiated with BN in the very same way we negotiate with BN, for example, when we want to access a customer in Chicago. It's this notion of disparity between the two regulatory regimes that concerns us, and the fact that we're giving an unfair advantage to U.S. railways to come in and take Canadian traffic at a prescribed regulated rate, when we don't have the same right to do so in the United States.
Evidence of meeting #68 for Transport, Infrastructure and Communities in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was railways.
A video is available from Parliament.