Thank you very much for the question, Chair.
In February, as I said, the government issued a policy direction for a renewed approach to telecommunications policy. You will see, if you look at that direction—which is relatively short; its about 1,400 words or the length of a short essay—there are references to affordability and competition over two dozen times. It was very clear to us that, through our decisions, we need to focus on enhancing competition and promoting affordability.
Immediately, we looked at renewing our approach to Internet competition. We know the current framework that we have is not working. We know small providers have been dying off. They have had “for sale” signs over the past couple of years, so we know it's happened. We've renewed our approach and we launched a proceeding. There's more to come on that.
At the same time, on cellphone services, as you've seen with respect to MVNOs, mobile virtual network operators, we have mandated that the smaller competitors have access to the larger providers' infrastructure to be able to compete and offer cellphone services across the country. They have seven years to build their own infrastructure, which is that balance in the investment and the competition.
Immediately, we took action. We reduced rates, as my colleague said, by 10% immediately on some wholesale rates. There's been a lot of action, and there's more to come very soon.