Ms. Falcone, you mentioned the example of delivering to the ground floor of an apartment building. It helped clarify one of my thoughts around the service to a community mailbox or super mailbox versus directly to my door. I thought, well, I own the mailbox at my door, but the community mailbox is owned by Canada Post.
In your experience, and maybe in the experience of the United States—I'm not sure if it's possible there—what sort of fees would be paid by private delivery companies and couriers to have access to Canada Post's community mailbox network? In suburban areas where Canada Post is not delivering to the door, would the thought then be that UPS would cease to deliver to the door, or would UPS continue to prefer delivering straight to the door of a suburban customer rather than accessing a community mailbox?