I don't want to speculate about those reasons. Our position is that the airlines have to issue those refunds. When you look at the actual facts—at the balance sheets, for example, for Air Canada, which does have public financial data—they would have had the money to refund passengers. Those airlines may need some support down the line, but there is no sign that the airlines are on the brink of bankruptcy.
If the airlines are in the position of being unable to issue refunds, as opposed to unwilling, there are proper procedures in this country for dealing with that. There is the BIA, the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act. There is the CCAA, the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act, often called “bankruptcy protection”. None of the airlines in question has applied for any of those instruments. It indicates that they are solvent. They do have the money. They just don't want to pay.