I've been very preoccupied by the situation with respect to local news. Local newscasts in the CBC have been in decline for 15 years, for whatever reason. At the same time, we know a couple of things about Canadian viewers: for them, local news is exceptionally important.
When we did those pilots last year, we attempted to see whether we could figure it out. What we did when, as Bob said, we tested them was actually take them out and show them to people, and we did focus group tests on them to see which ones we thought would work and which ones would not. One worked out, and the others didn't.
We understand that what we need to do is to think about where CBC news is going overall, not just with respect to local news but also with respect to what Bob was talking about earlier, the fact that Canadians increasingly consume their news on non-television and non-radio platforms. They consume them very heavily on the Internet, and it's going to be on mobile phones by and by. We thought it would be a good opportunity to think very hard about how we ensure that over the course of the next three to five years we deliver news programming to Canadians that is as compelling, as deep, as pertinent, as relevant as we can possibly make it across all platforms.
This turns out to be a fairly complicated thing to think about. That's why I said in my opening remarks that we've done that. We're kind of half-way through it. We expect to have it concluded to a point where we can discuss it with our board towards the end of November, so that we can begin to roll it out probably sometime at the beginning of the new year. It's something Jane and I have been working on very closely together, to figure out how to deal with the kinds of platform integration issues Sylvain was referring to earlier.