I can tell you. If you look at the government records, it's at least $11 billion.
Most of that funding goes to help our large telcos make those investments across Canada, yet here we are. You made a decision to reverse your initial decision, which lowered those wholesale rates, and you returned them to the 2016 rates, which were higher. It is these large telcos that, for the most part, received the largest benefit of the public investments that are being made in our broadband systems across the country. Of course, those subsidies end up going to the bottom line of the big telcos.
If you look at Rogers', Telus's, Bell's or Shaw's bottom lines, there are significant profits being made, yet your organization made a decision to effectively make it more expensive for the small telcos to compete and provide Canadians with better pricing and better service.