The CRTC has an important role to play here, and it's on their three-year plan to revisit that basic service objective. This is what allows Canadians in rural, remote, and hard-to-reach places to have the ability to access plain old telephone service and dial-up Internet. But as we all know, dial-up Internet these days isn't really going to cut it anymore, so the CRTC will be looking at that.
That's the kind of role we see the CRTC playing here in figuring out the balance between, admittedly, the need, perhaps, or the ability of only one service provider to get the job done, but also what the standard should be so that all Canadians—who, by the way, are spending on average of $185 a month on their communication service—can afford to actually get the level of service that they need to participate.