We currently have a tentative agreement with Canada Post, and we have agreed to be able to use part-timers and temporary workers on the weekends. In the past few years, Thanksgiving is when we start to see the parcel business towards Christmas explode, by hundreds of per cent. Even in Windsor, a small city, there have been millions of parcels. We're open to that. People who are hired currently are hired at a lesser rate; that's happened since 2011. The idea about alternate-day delivery doesn't make sense in a carbon footprint kind of way. There may be parcels going to a house on a Thursday, and unless you're changing your delivery standards, they're not getting letter mail that day. Say, they have letter mail on a Thursday, but that's not a delivery day; they're also not going to get their parcel on that day. For the five-day or the seven-day delivery, I think they're looking at evenings, and actually they're looking at Sundays as opposed to Saturdays. Right now, when you get a parcel delivered to your door, you're at work, so you get a card and you have to go to a postal outlet to pick up your parcel. They think they can increase deliverability of parcels with Sunday delivery because people are home.
On September 28th, 2016. See this statement in context.