That was a quote, I believe, from the Sims report. And what he was getting at is that some employers will restructure so that their reliance on permanent employees drops, so that if there is a labour disruption they will be in a jurisdiction where they'll be able to continue to operate, and that's where they'll have their permanent....
Let me give you an example. If you're in a financial institution--and I'm not going to try to blame the financial institutions for this--if you had at risk.... I've heard, yes, they're only 1% organized, but that's today; who's to say what could happen down the road? But if they were to get organized, say a VISA centre or something like that in Toronto or wherever else, would the bank--and you'd have to ask them--put their investment at risk, in the case of a strike or lockout, to have a VISA centre go down? It's very easy to put that operation across the border. I think that's what Sims was getting at.