The problem you're dealing with comes from what I describe as an unregulated monopoly. Ted Rogers is a great Canadian, but somebody working for him made the decision that this would drive the penetration of digital. It costs your mother $14 a month, and it would cause other people not to see CPAC. If anybody says CPAC is not important to democracy, I'd argue with that.
I want to relate that to your CBC investigation. Oh, by the way, they didn't move just CPAC; they also moved the Ontario legislature to a place you couldn't get it. Maybe they didn't think that was important.
One thing that Rogers has done in Ontario, which we are getting a lot of complaints about, is that they have moved the carrier for radio stations to their digital. You have to pay more to get radio over cable, which is important in big cities with high-rises such as where we are here or in Toronto. And they've eliminated CBC Radio Two from the offering--they have CBC Radio One--and yet they have three Vancouver radio stations available to the people of Ontario on their cable system.
The CRTC has the authority to make sure this doesn't happen, and they have delegated it to the cable monopolies.
You're raising a big subject...maybe for your next investigation.