I just want to go back to what we said. We are convinced that we have maintained our Canadian advantage against those we compete with in the industrial world, Germany, Japan, and the United States. Again, they are the countries that we measure our costs against in terms of doing business moving forward.
In terms of the position, it was a very good question about the manufacturing footprint and the ability to keep jobs here in Canada. What we were able to get out of General Motors was a re-commitment to future product allocations into our facilities. These should utilize our plants more effectively moving forward. But it will be incredibly important for the Canadian and provincial governments, during the terms and conditions of the loan, to make sure that we maintain our manufacturing footprint here in Canada on a percentage basis, similar to what Prime Minister Harper and Premier McGuinty said in December. Twenty per cent of our existing production is here in Canada, so they'll provide 20% of the loan. The terms and conditions of the loan should protect that 20% of production in Canada. So if a product falls off because it's not successful, they have to add a product to maintain that investment base here in Canada.