You have raised a number of points concerning this issue, as also in previous questioning; that is, the concern about people's retirement plans.
In fact, it is upon the lower-income people who have not earned enough pension credits, if they have a pension plan at all to contribute to, and people who are not in workplaces where there are pensions, that mandatory retirement would have a real, negative impact.
There was even a person who was in the Ontario civil service who wrote to us. Of course, they have decent pensions there, but she hadn't gotten the credits. She had to go back to work late in life, and she did not have the credits to retire adequately. She felt that she was going to be asked to leave and not have the opportunity to continue working, when she was completely capable. That is the pernicious effect of mandatory retirement: it hurts the people who need protection the most.
I know there is always a concern about making sure that they make room for other people. I remember that one part of the discussion here has been that we should make room for younger workers, and so on. That is the crux of the pilots' unions' positioning in court. The issue arises here when you take two equally qualified people—and the pilots' union can guarantee that every pilot is qualified—and set them in front of you and say: “You're 35, and you're 60; since you're 60, you're out, and since you're 35, you're in.”
That is the essential definition of age discrimination, which is why we oppose it. When we're talking about making sure that people have something to retire on, that's what we're talking about. People have to be able to earn their pension and savings so that they can retire safely. It's another part of our advocacy for good pension plans for everybody. But that is for another day, I'm sure.
As to the interaction with the CPP, I'm not sure how this situation would offend it, because every person who has access to a pension plan and continues working continues to contribute to the pension plan and does not actually take out any pension. Therefore, the pension fund, which has been under threat in the last little while, would actually be more stable, if more people stayed working.
Furthermore, the workplaces having to take measures to deal with this would in fact be further ahead. They would have experienced workers carrying on in their jobs. There'll be less to do than if the person left and they had to retrain. Really, if you need the extended period of time, great.
We have waited long enough. There is no need to wait any longer. You can make this change immediately.