I have a couple of comments.
I don't want to leave people with the impression, and I don't think the impression should be left, that somehow access is diminishing. I'll give you a personal anecdote.
I grew up just north of Highway 7, If anybody knows where Madoc is, about 15 or 20 minutes north in a small town of I think 50 to 75 people. Of course, there was never a bank branch there, nor could there be. In fact, at only varying times was there even a store there.
If you grew up in Madoc, there was always an expectation that if you were going to do any kind of banking, then you went into Madoc and went to the TD Bank branch, which is still there. When I was a kid, that meant you went there, and it was open from nine until three and part of the day on Saturday. You had to transact in person. There was no ABM. You had a certain number of hours to do a certain number of transactions, and that was that.
My parents still live there, and they can bank online. They can go into the branch that has extended hours, and there's an ABM if the branch isn't open.
Has access improved for them or diminished? I dare say for them it has improved. I don't want to leave the impression that somehow all Canadians in rural Canada have experienced diminishing access from changes in the environment, because I know that's not true.
There are circumstances, as you're saying, where change has happened. Do we all try to find ways around that? Yes, we try to find ways of addressing it, but I don't want to leave anyone with the impression that there aren't circumstances on the other side of this as well.