Our huge focus at the moment is around cellular. Having listened to other witnesses, people tend to just talk about Internet in general, but cellular can take you a long way in terms of Internet connectivity. We are working with the provincial government at the moment to try to figure out the cost or do the cost-benefit analysis of expanding cellular into the underserved areas we have in the province. So far we're seeing that it's hugely problematic. For that $1 million per cell site, which covers maybe an additional 100 or 200 people, the economics just don't work at all.
Regarding fixed wireless Internet service, we are in the process of adding 34 towers ourselves in terms of sites. We have an application in to Connect to Innovate for another 17 towers, so we're continuing to expand our fixed wireless service, as are other competitors.
I don't want to overstate the extent to which competitors use our facilities. They use them when it makes sense for them. They're more inclined to put their facilities on top of grain elevators, or any kind of high location where it's possible. They will also do a lot of daisy-chaining to then either give it to us or perhaps even to somebody else. Sometimes they will break into the national fibre thing on the railroads, where the railroads go across.