Through the chair, thank you for the question.
Actually, we've seen the exact opposite. Our community has been very welcoming and understands that we have something really good coming. We're still in our initial stages, of course, but I can talk about some partnerships. We've partnered with some of our small towns as well and what's happened through that is that they've now in fact been able to see the level of service. In our small towns, we're talking about a gigabyte.
We're in fact trying to have high service, not just service, because our standard of service for some of these communities is so small that it does not meet rural needs. One good example, for instance, is that the local medical clinic in one of our towns now has the ability to efficiently upload X-rays. Just the ability to have good health services within our communities is so important. These partnerships are extremely important, and we can't do these alone.
I want to come back to a lot of the comments I've heard today. I'm going to deviate just a bit. I've been all around the world, and I've taken a phone with me wherever I go. I've been to some third world countries and I've see the costs there, and I just can't believe it. You throw a few dollars down and you get a month of service, including data. We come home and there's no competition whatsoever. There's no incentive to have competition in rural Canada if we don't have that backbone infrastructure here.
I hear people talk about the Competition Bureau and so forth, but what we need to do is get the backbone of all that infrastructure in place and allow all the companies [Technical difficulty—Editor audible] that infrastructure. You know what? I'm not worried about where that company is from, whether it's from Canada, the United States or anywhere in the world. We want to be competitive in rural Canada, and as rural Canadians we need to have that level. I don't believe that we even have good 3G right now, let alone.... I have so many dropped calls that I can't believe it.
In rural Canada, we're so far away from what we're hearing about 5G.... I appreciate the question on 5G, but we need to start something here. Our goal at Red Deer County is to get a gigabyte for fibre, to get at least 200 megabytes to our rural people and to in fact have something that's not going to stall out. Currently, people are paying for services that they're not getting, and those services are so slow that the Internet actually stalls out. They've put so many people on that one bandwidth that as people come on it slows down and finally stops.
I think we need to see the change, and that change will never happen without legislation. I know that I'm deviating from the purpose of your meeting today, but if that legislation comes into play, there in fact will be absolutely no need for Rogers or Shaw to merge. They would be able to use that open network that's available, and everyone is going to thrive.