This is something that stations have a lot of experience with.
Twenty years ago, I was the manager of CJLO, which broadcast over the Internet. There is a very small transmitter, but otherwise everything is on the Internet. The station has been operating that way for 20 years.
We have always been innovators in community radio. It is vitally important. As I mentioned, we are livestreaming, podcasting—we're all there. We have stations that have been doing this for a very, very long time. But community radio is unique. It has to also exist on the transmitter towers, because we haven't gotten broadband to all parts of Canada. In the moment of an emergency, we do not have that sort of connection, and we need to make sure that we are there. We are at the front lines for the emergencies.
We live in both worlds, but our stations have always been developers and innovators when it comes to digital technology. In many cases, campus stations' entire audience is that new generation that lives on the Internet.
These have always been the innovators in the broadcasting industry. We just need support to do better.