Happily, yes. First of all, LVVR would do nothing for fatigue.
As far back as 2010, CN Rail and our union started negotiating methods within the collective agreement for how to address fatigue. It didn't get a lot of steam and didn't get a lot of headway. The last collective agreement, which I believe was ratified with CN on August 4, contained a lot more on fatigue. As well, CN and the Teamsters have entered into a co-operative plan with the help of a fatigue specialist, a former TSB officer who specializes in sleep science, to work with us accumulating and tracking scientific information to ensure that the methods we're taking with respect to crew scheduling, rest, and work-life balance are having a positive and factual impact. It's one thing to say that we think this is going to help; it's another thing to measure how it's going to help.
I believe you heard a little bit from CN today about the Fitbit study, in which we actually.... I've worn them. We wouldn't put anything on our members that I wouldn't do myself. It tracks your waking and sleep habits. There were a few bugs at first. For instance, it recorded that during a two-hour period when I was at a pension meeting, I was asleep, so there is a little debate on that, but we worked out some of the bugs in that and our members are wearing them. The plan, and what we've done, is to put them in the non-scheduled environment without the enhancements that we've negotiated, track their information, transform their environment to a more scheduled, structured environment, and let them adjust to that. We're just now getting the data back with the follow-up information, and it's been very positive so far.
We are getting letters from members saying, “My goodness, I finally have a life and things are working well”.
Interestingly, last week—I'm not sure what CP said to you about this—we reached a tentative agreement with CP Rail, a one-year extension to the existing collective agreements for locomotive engineers and conductors at CP. That agreement expires this December. There is a tentative extension out for ratification now. The cornerstone of that agreement is provisions with respect to scheduling to try to address fatigue in a similar manner using the same sleep specialists we are using at CN to try to make improvements there as well.
We are seeing a lot of things, from better work-life balance and better retention to the employers benefiting from better attendance at work, and people aren't booking off unexpectedly.
We're working through the collective agreement process to get there, so there has been some good news. You may or not be aware of the agreement reached last week, but that's positive for everybody to try to get something done there.