Maybe the minister would like unlimited powers, as you suggest, but the powers in the Telecommunications Act aren't unlimited. They're very well defined.
ISED, through the minister, has taken a number of measures to reduce prices. The greatest would be to increase competition and to ensure that there is competition. At the end of the day, when we look at the Competition Bureau's own findings, when you have a regional player that's competing against the three incumbents and they have a decent market share, that brings prices down by 35% to 40%. So competition brings prices down.
We've taken measures. In spectrum auctions, we've had set-asides or caps, and we've imposed competitive measures and deployment conditions. All of these things are designed to ensure that people have the spectrum they need to compete.