I think we're starting from a base of strength. The access to strong Canadian content has been a priority of successive governments for a long time. In the anglophone part of the country where the competition from American programming is more severe and intense, I think one of the key things, from your point of view as a member of the finance committee, is the level playing field. The people who are delivering programming into Canadian households should be making contributions toward the Canadian broadcasting system.
You may know that for over-the-air broadcasters, something like 30% of their program expenditures are in Canadian content. For distributors, it's down around 5%. You mentioned Netflix. Not to single it out, but at the moment, Netflix is taking advantage of federal law and regulations in order to not collect sales tax that Canadians would otherwise pay. We just saw the Rogers organization withdraw from that market in competition with Netflix. In this city Rogers had to charge 13% HST, and my neighbour would have paid nothing in taxes for Netflix. So there's a role for government in ensuring that all the players are making some type of contribution to the system, and some of the details to that effect are in the longer brief that we submitted in August.