This amendment seeks to address something that came up in the examination of the long-haul interchange scheme that was put forward. It concerns the exclusion corridors and the limitations on shippers that were outside those exclusion corridors and needed access. The exclusion corridors themselves, as we understand, do provide ample competition for shippers, because there are at least two railways operating in those corridors, and in many cases more.
In order to open up long-haul interswitching to more places in the country, the places that need it, I'm proposing adding after line 42 on page 23 the following:
(4) For the purpose of paragraph (3)(b), an interchange located in the metropolitan area of Montreal is deemed to be outside the Quebec-Windsor corridor for a shipper who has access to the lines of only one class 1 rail carrier at the point of origin of the movement of its traffic at a point north of the Quebec-Windsor corridor in the Province of Quebec if the nearest interchange in Canada is located in the Quebec-Windsor corridor.
The practical outcome of this would be to open up long-haul interswitching and, obviously, competitive rates in communities in northern Quebec, such as Chibougamau, Val-d'Or, and Lac-Saint-Jean.
Similarly, I'm proposing the following:
(5) For the purpose of paragraph (3)(b), an interchange located in the City of Kamloops is deemed to be outside the Vancouver-Kamloops corridor for a shipper who has access to the lines of only one class 1 rail carrier at the point of origin of the movement of its traffic at a point north or southeast of the Vancouver-Kamloops corridor in the Province of British Columbia if the nearest interchange in Canada is located in the Vancouver-Kamloops corridor.
Again, this would open up long-haul interswitching competition, this time for communities in southern B.C. in the Columbia-Kootenay area, as well as north, up through Blue River, north of Kamloops, and all the way to Prince George and that area.
I believe, Madam Chair, that this addresses some limiting impacts of those exclusion zones and, per my earlier comments, certainly opens up the ability for shippers of other commodities in the mining sector and the forestry sector to have access to competitive rates.