Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Let me begin with where I will end in five minutes. Since the spring of 2009, our Nortel group has been asking for pension deficits to receive preferred priority status, not the super-priority status as currently tabled in Bill C-501. We want pension deficits to be at the front of the line of unsecured creditors.
I'm a Nortel pensioner with 27 years of service. The NRPC, my organization, was formed in January of 2009 to protect the interests of some 20,000 former employees and pensioners who would be affected by this bankruptcy. We now have 8,200 paid members in our group, despite having to find people who were ill and unable to access e-mail. Basically, we've reached out as well as we can to that pensioner class. Within that group, there are some 11,700 pensioners in pay, with an average age of 74 years. I'm one of the younger guys, and that's why I'm here; I have the energy to do it.
The average pension is $17,500. It is not a gold-plated pension by any standard. In addition, our retirees have been receiving health and life insurance benefits from the corporation. For the past 22 months, we've all been receiving 100% of our pensions and benefits.
Here is where I have to stand up and feel like the ghost of Christmas future. I know what's going to happen to the Nortel pensioners. First, at the end of this year our health benefits will be taken away. Second, some time early in 2011, the pensions will be cut back by 36%. There will be hardship for all Nortel pensioners, and poverty for some. A modified Bill C-501 could significantly improve that situation.
The assets of Nortel are being sold off. What we will get from them will be determined by how the global lockboxes into which all of the assets are going will be unlocked. The judges within the U.K., Canada, and the U.S. have to decide how to unlock them. We're going to get some money out of them, but we don't know how much or when. The problem, we think, is that the amount may be ten cents on the dollar—twenty cents on the dollar could be optimistic for us. But we're also appalled by the fact that the U.S. estate is probably going to get more than the Canadian estate. There's not much here to console Canadian Nortel pensioners who work in the service of a global Canadian company.
Again, we are looking at Bill C-501 as a mechanism to improve our lot within the Canadian estate.
To give you some idea of the magnitude of what's happening to the Nortel pensioners, approximately $1.5 billion in assets will be taken away from us, with $1.1 billion coming from the pension plan and another $250 million in lost health insurance. When you take into account the combined loss of pension plan and health benefits, we calculate that some people, especially those outside of Ontario who don't have the pension benefit guarantee fund, will suffer a loss of 45% of their income.
How did the pensioners get into this sorry state? Nortel faltered during the economic crisis and meltdown, and the pension plan was collateral damage. From 2006 to 2010, the wind-up rate of the pension plan went from 86% down to 64%. While it's harder to prove, we also believe that the bankruptcy was strategic and probably driven by the junk bond holders, who had no interest in the company actually resurrecting and restructuring itself. The gain of the junk bond holders would come on the backs of the pensioners. None of us pensioners—none of us, I repeat—ever figured out that we'd be in this situation. None of us ever thought that our registered pension plan was at risk. I had long discussions with our lawyer, saying no, this cannot be true, and he kept coming back and saying yes, it's true.
Let's compare the two competing classes of unsecured creditors, the bond holders and pensioners. Bond holders never want for sophisticated money managers. They negotiated bonds with a sophisticated corporation. The pensioners were not sophisticated, let me tell you. The bond holders can distribute their risk across many corporations, whereas the Nortel pensioners have all of their assets tied up in one single entity. Bond holders calculated the probability of Nortel going bankrupt—that's what it's all about—and they have many different instruments to manage their risk. The bond holders have cross-licensed their bonds between Canada and the United States, so if the United States estate paid out better, they'd do well, as they can double-dip in both estates. We in Canada are only dependent on what actually ends up in the Canadian estate—and it's a cash-poor Canadian estate, because we had the global headquarters and the global R and D, but none of the money.
The bond holders could actually buy credit default swaps and buy a form of insurance against a corporation going bankrupt.
Again, I have a list of many things the bond holders could do, but the pensioners were totally unprotected. So we never contemplated that we were going to go into default. In fact, our taking a pension was a form of risk mitigation: Would I live too long and not have enough money to carry into my retirement, or would I die too soon and my spouse not be looked after?
So our conclusion is that it is unfair and it's an uneven playing field when you pit pensioners against bond holders initially, and now against junk bond holders. That's why we're asking for Bill C-501 to provide preferred or higher priority to pensioners.
Thank you.