Thank you very much for this fundamentally important question.
As I mentioned at the outset, we inject $5 billion a year into the Quebec economy. I mentioned the fibre optic network that we rolled out in Trois‑Pistoles, Saint‑Côme, Lac‑Beauport and all over Quebec, in places such as Shawinigan, Saguenay—Lac‑Saint‑Jean and Thérèse-De Blainville. It's a very long list.
We want to do more, but the CRTC recently imposed a decision that forces us to give our competitors, even dominant ones, access to our infrastructure in Quebec and everywhere else.
In Quebec, two major cable companies dominate the Internet services market. They have by far the largest market share. What we're trying to do is put in fibre optic infrastructure to encourage competition in communities across Quebec and Canada. The CRTC tells us to invest tens of millions of dollars in community after community and then let a competitor use our network once we've set it up. That competitor is then able to compete with us without our having a single subscriber. That takes away our return on investment, and we've had to invest less as a result.