The key, I would say, is flexibility. What you want to have in a support continuum...you have military people with functional capabilities, you have contracted solution space, and an option in contracted solution space--what we have--is what we call the CANCAP, the civilians. Will we continue to use it? We will continue to maintain that contract. So in fact that contract presently, if I'm correct, takes us out to December 2012, and we're in the process right now of re-competing the framework of that contract. How we use that contract is essentially if we have a deployed operation, and--back to an earlier question--capacity, how much, when, and where. It allows us to maintain a level of capability that is essentially on the shelf, so that if we were in a scenario where the government had asked us to deploy to a number of missions at the same time, and we needed additional flexibility to augment existing support relationships, then this contract is a venue, or a tool, that we could use.
On November 17th, 2011. See this statement in context.