I'll address your comment on the wage subsidy first, and then I'll answer your question about wireless home Internet.
In terms of the wage subsidy, yes, we did receive it, and we received it in large part because the businesses we own—and I'm thinking here of Bell Media, the largest media company in the country, and our retail footprint of retail stores—were some of the hardest hit by the pandemic. It was a choice between laying off thousands of employees in an era where advertising revenue disappeared and retail stores were shut down or keeping Canadians working, and we chose the latter. We think the program itself worked, and it served industry well in order to keep people working.
In terms of your wireless home Internet question, our preference when we build networks is always to build fibre where there's a business case to do so. In smaller rural areas, there are challenges with building fibre connectivity, so we've come up with an innovative product, which we call “wireless home Internet”. It reduces the cost of the build, reduces costs for consumers and extends the network footprint in an innovative and seamless fashion. As more spectrum becomes available, we'll be able to do even more of that for rural Canadians.