As I said, in the last report published by ISED we're about halfway there.
The interesting thing about that program is the plans that are subject to the targeted price reduction. We're seeing that consumers want more and more data, so some of those plans are becoming less popular with customers.
The other thing that's happening is that you are seeing higher data usage plans' prices coming down. That's not by virtue of any form of government intervention; it's simply by virtue of the operation of the competitive marketplace among facilities-based providers.
I think that to get to where the government would like to go and to ensure that Canadians have access to very competitively priced wireless services, we need to continue the path that the government embarked upon in, I think, 2008, with the introduction of facilities-based wireless competitors—the likes of Shaw, Vidéotron and Eastlink—that are having a real impact on the competitive dynamic in the market and are driving prices downward.
I'll stop there.