That's a fabulous question. I'm going to try to contain myself in how passionately I speak about this topic. I believe this is a conversation around opportunity. When I use the word “poverty”, I only use that to shock people, inasmuch as I think we're missing an opportunity by not looking at the whole conversation around broadband, I think, as a charter right. I think we need to start looking at broadband that way, and that should be that important to the foundation.
In rural Alberta, we see a tremendous gap: 10 megabits down, and one up. You hear that old dial-up Internet in your head when you're talking about speeds that are that slow. I know it's hard to keep talking about broadband in context, but it is. The one thing that COVID has taught us is that it doesn't always matter about place; it matters about ideas. I think if we can bridge that digital divide, we can create new places and new opportunities that are really still tied to those ideas. I think it's very tied to this immigration conversation.
Thank you for that.