I think you accurately described the challenge. In urban areas there's a bigger market and it attracts more competition.
We have in Canada, if you will, sort of a head start. Many countries only had a wire-line telephone system, never wired cabled. We, like the U.S., have two wires in most homes, cable and telephone wires. Then we have wireless on top, and then we have, as you've described, resale—people obtaining access on a wholesale basis to that and reselling it.
The challenge in rural areas is that there's much less business interest in competing there. The challenge for the CRTC is to figure out what kind of wholesale arrangements are suitable in rural areas that will accomplish both objectives, continuing to see facilities extended to the underserved or unserved while also supporting competition, and that's a very challenging proposition.
We'll be looking at Northwestel, the company that provides service to most of northern Canada, in the coming months and year, and that will be one of the big challenges in that case.
I'm not sure if that fully answers your question, but you're absolutely right that rural areas are more challenging and often need a different approach from urban areas.
I hope that answers your question.