I think where we and our members are investing is in our communities. We stop investing when the business case dies or the retail rate and the cost to build and serve our networks don't connect. That's where the programs that we and other CCSA members have been accessing have been bridging the gap. They've been helping us with one-time capital injections to build beyond the traditional geographic boundaries in areas where the costs per kilometre to service every home otherwise don't make the business case come true. That's where we've been focusing.
Within those programs, as I mentioned in my remarks, as part of the funding application there is generally an ask on what your retail rates are going to look like for the next few years. They do test that. Whether it's municipal, federal or provincial, so far what we've seen is a test for affordability to make sure that when they do fund it, the funding group has a sense of whether or not it will make sense for the people who get connected at the end of the wire.