It will dramatically increase coverage. As Robert was saying, for historical reasons the country started more in the east, and more recently it's been growing a lot in the west. We find anomalies, though, that very important populations in the country are not being served. We serve Charlottetown, which is fine, but we don't serve Hamilton, which is seven or eight times larger. We don't serve central Alberta. We don't serve southern Alberta below Calgary particularly well. These are enormous places compared to other areas we're serving.
So the idea behind it is to say, fine, these unserved Canadians should also have local radio service, just as people do in Charlottetown, St. John's, or wherever. That's the purpose of it. So we tried to do it by determining where the greatest number of unserved communities were and what it would cost to build small radio stations and continue to service them. As Robert was saying, there will be 15--three in French, and 12 in English.