I'll offer a couple of considerations to that without weighing in one way or the other. I'll just say that our federally regulated pension obligations right now make special payments over five years. That's what we see as a reasonable planning window to allow people to make back up their current deficit, because oftentimes that deficit is not necessarily a function of their own making. It's the market returns. It's a number of factors. I believe there was a proposal at some point to make special payments in a certain province only three years, and there was push-back to the effect that three years was seen as insufficient.
The second is that there's nothing in a restructuring context right now that prevents that from happening with the consent of the pension regulator and the workers' union. In fact, that's exactly what happened in the case of Air Canada, where there was an agreement in the restructuring to forgo pension payments for a period of time to allow for the company to get back on its footing after the financial crisis and the complete decimation of air travel. That ultimately led to a restructured entity that came back.