No. There are two pieces there. The size of the liability—and accrual is the way to measure the liability—and what the liability is today and what it will be five years from now if you don't do something are two separate questions. Our financial statements only show what the liability is today.
The key question for me is what you are planning to spend this year to clean it up. The cash is a far more relevant number from that perspective. You have a liability. So what? What are you going to do about it? If the answer is to put a fence around it, that's pretty cheap. If it's to actually take remedial action and clean it up, that's important to understand. This is a great example of where you need both. If you take this action, what's the liability going to be five years from now? If the answer is that it will be much bigger, that's an interesting discussion. The key to cleaning something up is spending money, not accrual numbers. I think cash is far more relevant on that perspective than the accrual number.