Thank you, Madam Chair.
Ms. Kolt, thank you so much for speaking to us today, for joining us here today, for sharing your visionary work that has given so much to our region, our province and our country. Thank you for sharing your work in the arts, which has lifted up so many northern and indigenous artists across our region.
You've shared a clear message about the importance of the CBC for northerners in rural regions. You've also, though, shared the need for our public broadcaster to invest in regions like ours.
I know you made reference to Peter Mansbridge. Our region used to have a vibrant CBC contingent. In fact, Peter Mansbridge, as we all know, at least here, was first discovered in Churchill and brought on to the CBC. Others, like Cynthia Greer of Norway House Cree Nation was one of the first people across the country to provide local programming entirely in Cree as part of CBC North Country.
Years ago, Eric Robinson worked as a producer and broadcaster for the CBC here in northern Manitoba. He went on, of course, to become a cabinet minister in government. Also, of course, there is Mark Szyszlo, who worked for decades in our station based here in Thompson but was servicing the entire north on the road, connected to communities, sharing our stories—not just, as you pointed out, with our own communities and with each other, but more importantly, with our province, our country and, in some cases, the world.
I'm wondering if you can share with us what it was like, given the work that you do, to have a CBC presence in our region, and what came out of that? Could you compare that to what it's been like since 2017, when Mark Szyszlo left, when we've had our station shut down and intermittent coverage based here in the north?