That's great question and a really important question.
The moratorium, as you know, has been in place for 30 years—since 1994. A lot has changed in Canada, as I mentioned earlier, so I won't repeat that.
The list was created by the government at the time, not Canada Post. Many of the post offices in that moratorium were rural at the time, but are now very much in urban areas. I'll just pick a couple. Stittsville, outside of Ottawa, was very rural and is very suburban now. There's also Richmond Hill and Milton. These areas were rural at the time. They're sure not rural any more.
The moratorium is protecting those post offices, which typically have a franchise service nearby—within a couple of kilometres. There are quite a few of those in Canada now.
My concern around that is it may be stopping us from getting the right resources out to the rural areas where we need it even more. You're well served in the urban areas and, unfortunately, well served by our competition, which is essentially cherry-picking the top seven cities in Canada. They basically stay in that lane, within 200 miles from the U.S. border, and don't really....
We actually deliver some of their product north. We go north. We go everywhere every day, so we're getting cherry-picked to death.