The communities that are most in need, we identify as satellite-dependent. These are communities where there is not terrestrial infrastructure in place. They need to rely on a satellite, which means they're shooting a signal literally into space and waiting for it to come back down.
There are 25 communities in Nunavut that are satellite-dependent. There are no roads, no access to the electrical grid. They're fly-in communities. There are 14 satellite-dependent communities in northern Quebec, in the Nunavik region. There are several in northern Manitoba, first nations communities primarily in the northern part of the province that are also dependent on satellite. Those are by far the most difficult to serve. You don't have existing infrastructure that you can build on. You don't have hydro towers that you can string fibre optic across. Those are extremely challenging. Those are the remote communities.
We talk about two parts of the network. There's the last mile, and then there's the first thousand miles. The nature of the problem is different. In some areas, the reason you don't have Internet service is because with the distance from one customer to the next, the density is not there. With others, it is literally building that first thousand-mile infrastructure to even get a connection into the community or into the region.
So there two different types of problems.