I think the honourable member makes a very good point. Just to assure the committee, I think we are equally concerned about access to digital services and not having people inadvertently left behind.
I mentioned the $1-billion universal broadband fund, but there are a variety of other investments. One would be the funding that's going into new low-earth orbit satellite capacity that will be particularly valuable in much more remote areas where actually laying fibre optic cable, and so on, might be difficult.
Certainly the objective is to deliver high-speed broadband to all Canadians. There will be an array of investments to that end, as I mentioned, in the next couple of years, and the specific objective is going to be to try to make sure there's access for people who don't currently enjoy it.
On a separate track, and I won't go on at length about this, we're also very mindful that our policy frameworks and rules have to be updated because they were built for a different era. The digital charter and the work to actually make the digital charter real are an important element of ensuring that there's a level playing field and that citizens and businesses can participate in the digital world in a way that actually is purpose-built for the 21st century.
There'll be more to come on that front, but that's just to say that we also need to think about the frameworks and rules, in addition to the infrastructure. We're working on both.