We recognize the challenge right now that is affecting all of Canada, and that's why in my opening remarks, in every comment that I've made so far, you've heard us say that what we are looking for is stability of funding and not more.
We've assumed, to deliver what you have read today and what you've seen today, that we will have the same appropriation; that the $60 million will be available to us and that we will be considered by the different funds—the Canada Media Fund, for example—on an even playing field with all the other broadcasters, with all the same criteria applying to everyone; and that we will not be taken out or disqualified because of the funding we receive, remembering that this funding allows us to do things that nobody else wants to do, because the economic models of the privates simply don't work for things like Canadian programming in prime time and like serving the north. There's no business model for that.
So we are looking, Mr. Angus, for stability in the funding, and not having that will obviously influence the speed at which we can deliver this plan. But in the next years we are going to want to be more national, more regional, and more digital, as this plan says.