Well, that decision reflects both the state of the pension plan and the state of the industry. The reality, particularly as the industry ages and there are more retirees out there, is that the importance of these legacy costs relative to current production costs becomes larger, so we made the very difficult decision to freeze pensions. We have a pension system where you actually have to negotiate the dollars that you get on your pension; it's not a per cent of final-hour earnings or anything like that. It's kind of old-fashioned in that regard. We have frozen the pension rate moving forward for people who retire in the next few years. We've also frozen the existing pensions for people who are out on retirement already, and that will have a substantial impact both on the current cash costs of the company and on the legacy liability associated with the pension plan.
On March 9th, 2009. See this statement in context.