I can.
Among other things, in addition to my responsibilities for managing FETCO, I have been, and continue to be, involved in the pulp and paper industry. I'm responsible for working with the companies to coordinate the collective bargaining activities from the Manitoba border through to Newfoundland.
AbitibiBowater has been a member of this group that I manage for over 25 years. As a consequence, I know the officers and people at the company. Just yesterday I was speaking with Bruce Robertson, who's the chief restructuring officer of AbitibiBowater. Fortunately, after almost two years of restructuring at AbitibiBowater, the company is restructuring and is emerging from bankruptcy protection under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act, which is extremely good news for all the people who live in the communities where AbitibiBowater operates.
How did they get there? An arrangement has been made with the pension regulator in Quebec and Ontario to preserve the value in the pension plans for current retirees, so that the plan was not wound up, and it prevented the crystallization of the losses in the plan.
As well, the company and the union have agreed that in the future they will scrap the defined benefit plan and they will move forward with a form of target benefit plan, which is similar to a defined contribution plan, with far less risk. They have found a way to work with the regulator over a two-year period to sort out their restructuring. They fortunately didn't have to go bankrupt and they found a solution.
So I asked Bruce Robertson, “What if this Bill C-501 had been in existence two years ago?” His answer was that it would have increased the risk dramatically, that we would not have been able to achieve restructuring, and liquidation would have been almost certainly what would have happened. If liquidated, the company would have been forced to eliminate the employment of 8,500 direct jobs.
In a mill community, where the entire community is dependent on the operation of the mill, it's well known that every single job that's lost in a mill will cause the further reduction of four jobs in the community. So this would have resulted in the eventual demise of an additional 34,000 jobs, for a total of 42,500 jobs that would have been lost if AbitibiBowater was unable to find a solution to its pension problem and its restructuring issues.