Well, you do it through two ways. You do it through regulation, and we're discussing that with the Ontario government now, because 80% of the pensions are regulated out of Ontario. That's where we'll be tomorrow. You also do it by amending the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act. Currently, pensions have no rights in bankruptcy, so you have to get them to the table, just like the bondholders and the suppliers. Why should they be treated any differently? I mean, I've talked about deferred payments. A pension is a deferred payment.
In reference to what is going on in the rest of the world, a study that was done in September on global competitiveness and was published in the Star shows that of the ten top countries in the world, Canada was number ten. There were Switzerland, Sweden, Singapore, United States, Germany, Japan, Finland, Netherlands, Denmark, and Canada. As for the only countries that did not have any bankruptcy protection, Canada has a meagre one, and Singapore has none. The rest of those countries all have either preferred status, or an insurance status, or, in the case of Denmark, super-priority status. This is nothing new. This is not groundbreaking. This is just trying to put the Canadian pensioners where the rest of the world is and give them some protection in bankruptcy.