Air passenger rights, rail shipping legislation heads for political showdown
OTTAWA — Western grain farmers are on the verge of getting some long-sought federal help against the threat of rail backlogs, but face seeing their relief delayed over threats of political gamesmanship.
Hundreds of millions of dollars worth of product is stuck in a months-long logjam that shippers hope can be avoided in the future through the passage of a proposed federal law, which would give a federal agency powers to investigate and prevent bottlenecks and allow shippers access to more competitive shipping routes, known as interswitching.
Grain farmers are pressing for parliamentary approval of the Liberal’s sweeping transport bill, known as C-49 and want to have the new rules in place by August so there can be some certainty on the rails at the outset of the next shipping season.
The Canadian Federation of Agriculture and the Grain Growers of Canada are among the groups throwing their support behind the Liberals and urging parliamentarians not to play politics with the legislation.