Shifting gears for a moment, I think you're spot-on in discussing that in a world of the global marketplace, timely transport of our goods is absolutely essential. One of the things I find governments aren't very good at is communicating to the people who live in the communities we represent that international trade is good for small businesses and it's good for workers in our communities.
Has anybody done an economic impact on what the losses are for our failure to transport goods in a timely way, using perhaps the 2013 example where you mention that we lost markets to Scandinavia? Is there any kind of economic assessment that we can trumpet at home to say that if we don't do this, we're going to lose jobs in our communities?