Thank you, Madam Chair.
I'll start by saying that the government has the responsibility to allocate resources, like funding for Internet build-out, spectrum allocation, etc.
To some of the large incumbents, I understand that you're managing the profit and loss—that's fine—but the government is managing access. Increasingly, that is becoming a public good and part of our country's economic competitiveness, as well as equality of opportunity for individuals.
I think there is a bit of policy tension between what we're managing and what some of the incumbents are managing, given the regulatory environment that we've been operating under over the last 20 years.
I want to raise something with the representative from Telus, Mr. Geheran.
You made a comment tonight. You said that if you have a policy that fundamentally undermines an investment strategy, you have to change policy. I think I agree with that. So I'll start by asking, do you think that structurally separating the builders of a network from Internet service providers is a way to solve the policy tension that I just described?