Maybe I'll just give you a short introduction. I'm an actuary. I work with the Office of the Chief Actuary, and I was asked by the Department of National Defence to prepare numbers and costing of removing the integration from the CFSA plan, and I've also done an evaluation of the RCMP pension plan.
The numbers that were given to you today are what I came up with after doing an actual valuation in accordance with actuarial principles. The increase in the liability of the Canadian Forces' plan would be $5.5 billion, as was said today. This plan already has an accrued liability, that is, the cost of what was promised already in accrued services to date to all members of the pension plan. Right now, the liability is in the vicinity of $51 billion. If integration were to be removed, that would cost the accrued services an additional $5.5 billion.
I have done the same with the RCMP pension plan. This plan has an accrued liability of roughly $15 billion right now. If the integration were removed, there would be an additional cost of about $1.7 billion. That's with respect to what has been accrued right now as of the valuation date, March 2009.
On top of that—and this is what Mr. Hawn was saying—if the plan were to be amended, it would be a different plan, because members who retired would not have their benefits reduced when they attained the age of 65.
The way a pension plan is funded is through the active life of the employees. The cost of the CFSA plan is 22.4% of the pensionable payroll, which would probably be close to $1 billion. The cost of the RCMP plan is a bit lower, at something around 20%. If the plan were amended, then every year the contributions would increase. For the CFSA plan, that would be an increase of 1.8%; and for the RCMP plan, it would be an increase of 2.1%. That number of $10 million was.... This increase will be for next year, fiscal year 2010.