We looked at the financial statements for the last five years. We did assess the profitability, and we did some analysis to satisfy ourselves that we understood the financial situation.
On the last five years, of which three were negative and two were marginal-positive years, if I recall correctly, without adjusting, we did look at the one-time event, but in the report, we presented numbers the way they are stated in the financial statements, because that's the information that is known, public, and has been audited.
When we did the projections, though, we did not project the past.... Essentially, the projections for the future are based on a set of assumptions for the revenues for volume growth—or volume decline, in the case of letter mail—and for increases in costs, some of the measures Canada Post intends to implement, and the general direction of the economy, inflation, and so on and so forth.
It's not a projection where the last five years were such and the future years will be that. We went by type of revenue and by type of cost, and we looked at specific assumptions for each of them.