This is what's going on now: Industry Canada is asking how that auction should proceed, and there's a whole series of public users that at the moment are having to buy back spectrum from the private sector. I'll give you one example from Mr. Angus' riding in Timmins. A lot of remote areas around Timmins, including parts of Timmins, don't have broadband Internet. Some of them don't have cellphone access on remote highways as well, which is dangerous. Public entities and municipalities are getting together and are having to put out RFPs to private vendors to ask how much it would cost to put in hot spots and cellphone services to these areas. They'll come back and say that the business case means they need as least this much, so the municipalities are making up the difference. What they are having to do is effectively buy back spectrum from the private sector that has been previously auctioned.
It was originally a public resource. What we're saying is that in this upcoming spectrum auction, some of the spectrum should be kept back for public administration. It will probably happen on a local basis so that these public user groups can make sure that there is fair and equitable service for Canadians. In this way broadband could be another use of that rural transmission infrastructure.