If you were to take a look at the U.S. legislation, you'd see that it requires that funding be up to a certain standard. All Canadians would have roughly the same access to advanced telecommunications.
That's the way the U.S. law is structured. It has a joint federal-state board to work out problems between the two levels of government in the United States. I think that would be smart in Canada as well. It has special pillars for, as I say, education, health care and indigenous access so that those issues are dealt with properly and not sidelined. Those are pillars of that system.