Absolutely. Thanks. That's a good question, because we've been pushing for this for several years now.
As we had suggested and continue to suggest, the focus would be looking at all modes, specifically rail and port trucking, and taking a whole holistic view of the supply chain itself, looking for opportunities, looking for inefficiencies and looking for bottlenecks. Most likely you would have to bring in third parties to do that, in combination with information that would probably be provided by the railways, shippers and provinces, be it road, short-lines, and so on. It would basically be a holistic review of the supply chain, because I don't believe we've ever done one. If we have done one, it has been years, maybe 40 years ago. I don't remember exactly, but it has been a long time.
To all the points here, a combination of them, even the comments that Mr. Brazeau made, and so on, the supply chain has been beaten up. The railways have been beaten up. Shippers have been beaten up. We've been just hammered with weather events, blockades, and so on. I've never seen anything like it in all the time I've been doing this.
My question for government is: What can you do, and what visibility and what funding can we transfer into an overall review? Before we spend infrastructure dollars, we need to know where we spend them. There have been some good dollars spent already. I believe Ms. Hardy made a comment—correct me if I'm wrong—about how long infrastructure projects take to actually have legs. This is going to take a long time, but in order to spend the money and spend it wisely, we need to understand first where we're spending the money and why.
Thank you for the question.