Yes, I do. I know that WEPPA was introduced in September 2009. It was made retroactive to the end of January 2009, just missing the Nortel employees by about two weeks, and that would have guaranteed them $2,000 of severance pay.
There's no way the legislation in WEPPA is going to repay or pay up the severance pay that is owed to the employees. Nortel did not pay severance when they went into CCAA.
I was on long-term disability when that happened. Because I had heard they were talking to bankruptcy lawyers and I knew the situation of the company and I knew my long-term disability benefits were self-funded, I decided to apply for my pension. Now, when I applied for my pension, I was eligible for what they called a transition retirement allowance, which, again, was deferred wages that we would receive when we retired. That amount was $150,000. Because my pension did not start until two weeks after Nortel went into bankruptcy protection, I lost that $150,000. Nortel stopped paying all transition retirement allowances--all that were in process. You could take it either as a lump sum or monthly over a five-year period. I had chosen a lump sum.
So everybody who had that has lost out. Those claims now are a claim on the estate. We'll be lucky to get 15¢ on the dollar for that claim.
There are a whole bunch of issues related to employee claims for which we're going to be in desperate straits. That $150,000 was to pay off my mortgage. Three years ago I downsized to come to Ottawa to help look after my aged parents as much as I could. I'm now in a situation where I'm faced with selling this house I downsized to and moving into an apartment. Having been at an executive level with Nortel, and one of the few females, I must add, when I was an executive--there were only five other females in the 1,500 who were executives--I never expected to be in this situation in my life now.
So there's the severance pay. There's the people who were terminated and who are still not employed because of the narrow skill set they had working in the company. There are people who have gone to the other companies that bought out part of Nortel businesses who have been laid off from those businesses, because they are restructuring and downsizing.