Thank you, Madam Chair.
Obviously with COVID-19, public awareness about inclusion and so forth has heightened, but as the NDP critic for industry for a long period of time, I've held to three major principles that I think are important. I think they're also important for moving the general public this way.
First of all, accessibility and affordability need to be the same. There's no point in having one or the other. That is supported by the structure of using public airways or public land, which is a privilege not a right. That's the public entity we have at our disposal to keep Canadians connected.
I also believe that being connected in an affordable and accessible way is an essential service for Canadians.
Lastly I believe in a digital bill of rights; it's part of your human rights and it's part of your connectivity to society in a wholesome way. I spoke about this with the recent tabling of the changes to our Privacy Act.
I would like our guests to comment on that. You can disagree. That's great. But if you don't, what do you think of that? I think there needs to be a paradigm shift in how we approach this, because we control the regulator. We have the assets, being the public space, being the spectrum or having grand access to the use of materials and goods and services to put fibre optics in towers and so forth. But at the end of the day, we're building a dog's breakfast of a system; it has winners and losers.
Maybe we start with the CNIB and then ask each witness for a comment, please.