The fact of the matter is that nobody is suggesting that deregulation is appropriate where there aren't competitive market forces. So let's draw a clear distinction between where there is and isn't competition. That is the first point.
The second point is to say that where you create cheap access to somebody else's infrastructure, there is no incentive to build your own.
I can speak from a TELUS perspective. When we started moving into Ontario and Quebec, we had infrastructure investment plans that predated the CRTC's decision about some unbundling and mandated access to telco infrastructure. I can tell you that those plans got put on hold because of the CRTC's decision to mandate cheaper access to infrastructure. There was no incentive for us to invest in Ontario and Quebec in infrastructure--this goes back some years--because of the fact that the CRTC made cheap access to other infrastructure possible.
At the end of the day, those rules matter. If you want to encourage investment in infrastructure, the best way to do that is not to require access to somebody else's infrastructure unless those are essential services. That is very consistent with what's in this direction.