Okay. Sustainability was the focus and the goal. I look at that, perhaps, as also the restraint.
When you look at the nature of Canada Post over many decades and not just back to 1981, you see that it provided a service to Canadians. It was part of a nation-building exercise. It brought the world to Canadians who live in all corners of the country.
The world no longer comes to Canadians by mail, but it comes in many ways that don't make it to all the corners of our country. Certainly in rural parts of my riding, access to Internet and access to banking are limited. When people move out of rural towns, it's because the services they need to engage in the modern world simply aren't there. Isn't that possibly part of Canada Post's role?
You say you weren't constrained, but if you focused purely on the financial sustainability, maybe that was what constrained you, because if you had looked at the role of Canada Post in bringing the world to all corners of Canada, you would not be able to ignore the fact that it might actually, in today's day and age, cost some more money, and that maybe a subsidy for rural service might be something that needs to be canvassed.
What did you find from your survey of Canadians about their appetite for a subsidy for the service?