On the wireless side, we didn't include questions on the wireless Internet in the survey that we did. We did ask about wireless telephones, but we didn't have time to include those results in the survey or this particular presentation. The satisfaction with access to wireless phone systems is a little bit better in terms of the competitive options available, because they do tend to cross-pollinate across the country. You have Telus in eastern Canada and you have Bell in western Canada when it comes to mobility and wireless phones. But I don't have any information on wireless Internet access.
To improve these competitive options there are a few things involved. There are some things that we believe the CRTC has done, for example, to make it more difficult for competitive firms to perhaps grow their businesses and expand into new markets and rural areas—for example, some of its rulings no longer allowing competitors to purchase access to the incumbent's lines at a wholesale plus fair-cost amount. That ruling of a couple of years ago, we think, has actually diminished the number of competitors in the marketplace because they no longer have a controlled cost access to those lines. Companies like Bell and Telus can now charge those competitors a lot more to access and rent those lines. That's our understanding. I have a very rudimentary understanding of these things, but that's our understanding.
We have been supporting some of the competitive companies and trying to maybe go back to that system. We believe that competition in this area is still quite limited, especially for small and medium-sized companies, which may not always necessarily have access to cable networks either, because they're in industrial parks and cable companies don't go into industrial parks, for example. They are in bigger cities, where it's not so bad, but in smaller communities it can be very difficult.
Some of those rules we need to look at a little more closely to see if they really are helping to increase competition or actually making competition worse for this particular market segment, that is, small and medium-sized companies.