Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to the witnesses for appearing here today. This is obviously the first opportunity that we've had--certainly that I've had--to have Rogers here in an official capacity and on the record.
I wanted to first express the profound sadness and my condolences on the passing of Ted Rogers, a truly great Canadian, a great Canadian builder, and somebody I know an awful lot of Canadians have an awful lot of pride in. I think today he'd be awfully happy with his beloved Blue Jays starting off the season at 10 and 4, so we can find some great joy in that, I think.
I was very interested in the graphs you brought today, Mr. Lind, and also some of the statements you made. I guess the issue around conventional broadcasting for me--and I've expressed this to the broadcasters, I've expressed it to the cable companies, and I've expressed it to the CRTC--is we have a system right now where we have free over-the-air broadcasting of these networks. That is not slated to change. The CRTC is mandating that these networks must continue to broadcast. In fact, they must upgrade that broadcasting, according to the CRTC, in a couple of years' time and still broadcast that free over the air. On cable and satellite, they're looking for that same product to have a fee attached to it, because they are experiencing financial difficulty. I'm sensitive to that financial difficulty and also to the challenges that this presents in local communities.
I guess my question for you is if I were to look at your case against it, isn't that the central issue as to why the logic is broken on a fee on cable or a fee on satellite when it's free, if you're not receiving it that way?