Well, one successful Canadian municipality, one of the ones we looked at years ago that is still managing to maintain good connectivity, is the City of Fredericton. Fredericton is interesting because the municipality owns that fibre ring, so they're able to take excess capacity on that. They're providing a whole lot of companies...but in taking excess capacity, they make that available to citizens. Because they own that fibre ring, they're able to decide where they're going to extend it to. It's a case of an alternative provider.
I think to the extent that the municipal governments or federal governments can help bring in some additional competition to make those services available, that's going to help.
In terms of what has worked elsewhere, I think it's that vision. In Chattanooga, as an example, it's very clear that the entire local government recognized the value of this connectivity as an economic development initiative. It wasn't just that we want faster broadband so that people can watch YouTube; it was, if we build this network, at this speed, in this community, business will move into this community.
I don't have an answer to this, but the question is, why aren't we seeing more of those types of networks being built out in Canadian communities? Certainly, we're seeing some evidence of that, but it's not across the board.