Again, I would go back to the comments I made in terms of the stresses on our system right now. Running with old ships, ships that are past their design life, puts us at serious risk. We saw this last summer when the propeller sheared off our 61-year-old Queen of New Westminster, one of the oldest ships in our fleet. There was metal fatigue as well as other reasons for that. That ship was out 200 days. That is a huge hit in the system. We don't have reserve vessels, so we don't have extra ships waiting to be deployed when there's a problem inside the system.
Every time a ship goes down, the system suffers. This is particularly acute, obviously, on our busiest routes. Our major routes consume about 80% of the entire movement in the system. That has a huge impact on communities, and it's not just people travelling for vacations. In fact, the vast majority of people move in our system for other reasons, for employment, to fulfill supply chains, to take care of family and to attend medical appointments. It's pretty profound when people can't move the way they need to in our coastal regions.