I'd say I was in no mood to get a lot of comments. This was really directing them to take steps. As you said, I was expressing the frustration of millions of Canadians. I said this outage was unacceptable. As our colleague MP Gray said before, at that time I also said there should be a CRTC investigation of that. Although this was Rogers' failure, let's be clear that this was one company's failure when it did coding in what we understand was a routine update.
What I can say to you and to other members of the committee is that when I talked to the CEOs of Bell and Telus, everyone was in solution mode to try to see, as the crisis was evolving, what they could do to help with staff, experts and networks. I understand from the CEO of Rogers, whom I think you'll have as a witness, that they even enlisted international experts from their vendors internationally to get to the bottom of this. This was deep in the system, as they explained it to me. That's why I not only was pleased to see there was this level of willingness to help, but also want that to be codified in a legally binding agreement. That's also why mutual assistance will be part of that agreement, as will be emergency roaming and a communications protocol with the government and the public.