Thank you very much.
I heard Mr. Bachrach characterize a conversation he had with the Minister of Transport. I wasn't there, so I don't know if that was in QP or just in a private conversation that he talked about provincial leadership in this matter.
I want to talk about my home province of British Columbia, where, for instance, you can now get—and it's not across the country—from Hope in my riding, which has about 7,000 people in the region, all the way into downtown Vancouver or the Vancouver International Airport on B.C. Transit and TransLink buses. It's about a 150-kilometre journey. There are long stretches in between where there are no passengers, but the buses stop along the way in a number of first nations communities, etc. That build-out has happened in British Columbia.
Particularly, it was mentioned earlier in testimony about the Highway of Tears, or Highway 16, in northern British Columbia, where there has been significant action taken to provide service, not only through expanding B.C. Transit but by collaborating with private services like taxis, ride-hailing, not-for-profit, seniors' shuttles, friendship centre buses, B.C. Bus North, Northern Health Connections, etc. The B.C. Transit service provides that service. That gap was left and was very concerning for those communities in northern British Columbia.
I'm hearing a lot about needing what I would describe as a “made-in-Ottawa” solution for the entire country. Why are we not looking at models that are working and encouraging other provinces to adopt them, rather than saying we need a centralized national busing system? It seems a lot of the commentary is directed at one province, but we're not looking at the successes of other provinces like British Columbia.
Can we talk about provincial leadership and how we build on that, as opposed to simply looking for a national solution that perhaps ignores the reality in certain parts of the country?
I'll throw that open. Mr. Cassidy and Mr. Wabinski, perhaps you want to take the first run.