Unfortunately, I don't look at what the provinces and territories do; I can only look at what the federal government has done. In the connectivity strategy, the federal government has a target linked to affordability that's only based on the price of the service, so they'll do comparisons across the country or with other international prices.
In my view, that's missing half the story, because if a household can't afford Internet, you're not going to increase connectivity since it's beyond their means. You need to track household incomes and the link between them and the price of the service. The OECD recognizes that it should be done, and the department acknowledges that there's a link, but they're not gathering data around household incomes.