Thank you for the question. It's very good to see you again.
The quick answer is that the U.S. now has what they call a supply chain “czar”, but I don't think that's the right word that you want to use in this day and age. The commissioner, in essence, needs to have the authority.... You hit on a couple of key questions, and I think the U.S. is a good example to build on, but not the perfect example.
If we look at a commissioner in Canada in terms of the skill set, the individual has to have direct experience with the various modes of transportation in Canada in understanding the ports, understanding the trains and understanding the rail. There are some individuals who have that diversity. As Christian mentioned, the complexity that the industry person has to bring to the table is then in reconnecting, educating and bringing the departments together to make sure we understand where the short-term, mid-term and long-term solutions are.
On the power, this comes into a big discussion. Unfortunately, I do not think it sits within Transport. You need to elevate that responsibility higher within government. With regard to that, we've had some discussions on a couple of different areas, but as of yet, we haven't landed on what we feel would be the best mechanism. We're still looking at who would be in the best position to work with bureaucrats and elected officials to provide recommendations on changes to the regulatory environment in terms of looking at our Competition Act, looking at the Transportation Act and looking at the challenges we have around antitrust concerns relative to the shipping industry and some of those concerns on how we could potentially rectify it.
I would be happy to sit down in a meeting with any of the committee members to talk more. It's a complex answer, and I don't have time to deliver fully on it. I apologize.