I think it's really important for us to deliver equal services across the country to both our big, developed urban areas and rural or small-town Canada areas. I think that's extremely important. We have to make sure that everybody is getting equal treatment. In the example you gave, obviously, it seems that there's some confusion in terms of how funds are delivered. If Gatineau gets money out of some rural fund, that doesn't seem to me to be the proper way of using that money.
I think we have to do that. That's why I come back to postal banking and why I'm interested in that topic. As I mentioned, Canada is becoming a country where we have huge numbers of people living in these major cities and not enough people living in small-town Canada. I think this is an issue that other countries, for example European countries, don't have, but we have this issue in Canada. Australia has it even worse than we do, apparently. That's something we want to correct.
If we want to correct it, postal banking is important because we already have those institutions in every town. We already have, according to the last report, around 5,800 postal outlets across Canada, so we have an infrastructure that is already there and we can begin to add the delivery of financial services and allow people to get those kinds of issues.
I would single out small-town Canada, and I would also add to that indigenous Canada. In indigenous Canada, there are many post offices. In the over 600 communities there are hardly any bank branches, but they have post offices, so again, this is something that could help indigenous communities also.
Certainly, people need to have a bank branch. It's all very well to say you can do everything on the Internet, but if you want to get a mortgage, if you want to get a loan for your business, if you want to put cash you have through some business that you're operating into your account and if you don't have one in your community, that is a big difficulty.
I think this is something we should be doing and can do. We can encourage Canada Post to do much more than it is doing now as far as financial services are concerned.