We don't maintain that the consequence would be us disappearing. In the latest CRTC telecom monitoring report, people talk about the accelerating pace of competition. The most recent telecom monitoring report shows that in the business market in Canada, competitor share of business revenues dropped from 14% to 12% from 2005 to 2006. There's no question that the incumbents are dominant in the business market in our market in Canada today. It is a very competitive market, because most of what they do is forborne now. Certainly the market would be even tougher for competitors. As I said, 70% of the telecom market has been forborne. The only thing that is really regulated is the local exchange rates of the former monopolies.
At any point of forbearance, that's the high-water mark for a competitor share. With long distance, data services, or any services like that, after forbearance the incumbent gains back share and competitors don't. That's the history in Canada, without exception.
You have to expect that if forbearance comes along in local retail services, you will probably see a high-water mark for a competitive market share in that. We only have a market share at this point for most competitors, as Ken Engelhart mentioned, that is approaching 25% in a number of municipalities--more in Halifax.