In June 2010 we came out and said that we were going to put out 27 transmitters where we have originating programming, meaning that every place in this country where you have a program that we create will have a digital transmitter. That investment was a $60-million investment. We said that for that to happen in the context of our resources--and also in an environment where more than 93% or 94% of Canadians get their TV signal by either a cable or a satellite provider--that was the most we could invest at that particular time.
We kept the 627 other analog transmitters going by special permission of the CRTC.
We'll see what happens in the next months. We haven't decided exactly what we are going to do. We'll see what kinds of resources we have, and come the end of our extension whether and how it will play out. But the idea was that we wanted to make sure that we delivered our services across the country in the most economical way, by making use of our resources, and we thought that was a very viable plan.