Our second recommendation really seeks to compensate in part for the investments made specifically in rural regions through an accelerated capital cost allowance.
To answer your question, AIDE-TIC has developed a model, particularly in Quebec, according to which we are owners of the host infrastructure for the communities that ask us to do so, namely the municipalities and the RCMs.
So we build sites, we follow the rules, we obtain government authorizations and we build the sites that will encourage big service providers to come. They become our clients and lease the community infrastructure.
So we have been able to do some good work with federal and provincial support, but also with municipal assistance. We have been able to set up host facilities open to all the service providers by reducing not only their commitment of costs slightly, but also the set-up delays. Generally, service providers can take up to three years to set up a site, whether because of regulatory matters or negotiations to acquire land. In our case, it usually takes three months.
With a plan, as soon as we make a commitment to the local people, we can propose an alternative to service providers that also helps with the integration.