In response to the first part of the question, we do have an emergency response team. Shortly after the incident occurred, that team, which is well prepared, pulled together the resources needed to go through a plan that is put in place well in advance on how to react to these types of situations. We were delayed in this instance because our own network had gone completely dark. Nonetheless, we quickly made arrangements for alternative connectivity and that caused some delay.
Notwithstanding that, in terms of communication, broadcast started as early as 5:30 in the morning that there was a network problem. We did not know fully until much later the full extent and that it was a national outage. Once we knew, we communicated that on social media, which was just before 9 a.m., and on radio stations.
When I spoke to Canadians—customers—afterwards, what they really wanted to know, which is what we wanted to know, was the root cause and when this was going to be fixed. We didn't know the answer to that. We always strive to be extremely transparent with customers and Canadians and share as much information as we know, but we didn't know the answer to those questions. As we got more information, we shared that publicly. We did not know until late afternoon that we had a fix that would allow the network to come back up. Once we knew that, we promptly communicated it through all the relevant media channels.