Fair enough. When the Auditor General came and talked to you, your department knew that there were 50 communities that weren't being served by this program, so you obviously had done your homework there. You knew that it was going to cost $7 million to service them. You knew very well what was going on with these communities, that they weren't being serviced, that there was a cost attached to it, that the cost would have had to come out of the existing budget, and that you would have had trouble with the communities that already were getting the subsidy if you spread it out a little thinner.
Did you not feel that you had some responsibility to the other communities? Did you not feel that as a government agency you had a responsibility to treat Canadians fairly?