I will begin with the role of government. As you know, I cannot address the spectrum.
We worked a lot with the provinces on the broadband program. A mapping exercise has been done. I just want to point out that there is a federal-provincial meeting this weekend. It begins on Sunday, March 18, and goes until Monday, March 19. This will be partly to see where we are now, just to make sure that in our mapping we all on the same page. This is a matter of collaboration in terms of deployment for the government roles and the public infrastructure.
There is also the technology. Some companies now go with satellites. There is technology we wouldn't have talked about a few years ago, because it was not effective in terms of megabytes per second, for example. Now it's increasing more and more, so it is our role to see if there is any targeted investment help we can make in these strategic sectors. That is one part.
Going back to the spectrum, we want to make sure we have the winning conditions for rural deployment. That is why we have put in the extra requirements that weren't there back in 2008. The three incumbents will likely have one block each. If Bell and Telus share a network, with two blocks they will have this requirement. I cannot speculate, but it's kind of obvious.
Once again, as was addressed by Mr. Regan, don't overlook the other block. There is a block there, and I believe the players will develop technology to optimize it. The spectrum is there, it's available, and there might be something very interesting.