One of the challenges we've seen with ideas like a skinny basic package around cable is that in the past they were buried on websites. They were impossible to find and impossible to navigate. I think what we're talking about with a universal package that's available to everyone is to make it as inclusive and as widely available as possible.
We can look at any of the affordability packages that have been put forward in the past. They tend to be incumbent led, particularly around cellphones or for home Internet for subsidized housing in plans that are restricted in the amounts that people can use and restricted in the speed. Even though they may be affordable—for something like $10 a month—if they don't actually give people the services they need, it's a problem.
I think what we're looking at right now is something like a plan for $20 to $25 a month. It gives people those high-speed access services. If you want something faster than the minimum basic from the CRTC, you can do that, but I think we need to recognize, those who are making that call, that for companies like TekSavvy that are providing wholesale, that's a real challenge, because of where the wholesale rates are at right now, to make that actually feasible.
That's really where this isn't just regulating at the retail rate. It has to get at a lot of those systemic, underlying issues of everyone being overcharged at the base level off the bat.