We desperately need to have proper infrastructure investment strategies. There is a telecommunications strategy that Canada produced, but I've learned the distinction between what is a political strategy versus what we in the business sector recognize as a business strategy.
A business strategy tells you what you're going to build, the routing, how much it's going to cost, who's going to do it and what level of potential government investment—let's say federal, provincial, territorial or municipal—might be in it, and we don't have that. What we have is a $2-billion universal broadband fund, which everyone has to compete for. There will be one winner, and everyone else will be losers.
It undermines competition. It undermines ensuring that our customers have options. We know that competition improves service and improves cost.