There's no question that if it's different places, and I read one part that looks negative, you look bad. But in the overall report you might actually look good. It's not even a question of finding the good part; we might find the bad part before we find the good part. That wouldn't necessarily be helpful.
Going back to Mr. Carrie's point about going forward—I'm certainly not going to talk about Ontario Hydro—it would seem that all this good work will go for naught if indeed there is no placement of product in those two plants in Oshawa. There's one running out in 2016 and one running out about a year to 18 months later. It would seem, as much as Mr. Carrie's told us all about the great things that are getting done, that General Motors of Canada, in Oshawa at least, doesn't recognize them very well, because they're still refusing to put product.
That's not a question, that's simply a statement. I'm not asking Mr. Jennings to respond to that, unless, of course, GM of Canada has told him something that he hasn't told the rest of us in this country yet—that they're going to put a great product in Oshawa, which is deserving of the folks who work in Oshawa.
No doubt you're going to tell me that my time is up, Mr. Chair.