I guess the determination as to how it would apply at the federal level would be your call.
Yes, the teachers' pensions are a provincial jurisdiction, and there are provisions within contracts and provisions within those pension plans to allow for periods of time when individuals have been out for child rearing, to add those periods of time to their pension plans so they don't lose the years of service.
Where they lose is in reaching that point of annual salary that is the same as the men's. They don't get to that level. Whether that's a feature or a structure of the kinds of standards for pension legislation that are applicable at the provincial level or at the federal level is something for debate, because I think federal pension standards, federal labour standards, federal standards for everything, find their way down to the provincial level. So I think one is not impacted without the other.
Do you know what I'm saying? I think that one would have a significant impact on the other.