The government, at the end of the day, decides how much to allocate to these priorities. It's the industry department's job to then determine how best to allocate the funding we've been given in our budget to individual projects to make sure that we're getting the best value for money.
I think it's fair to say that—and we've seen this not just in broadband but in other areas—the pandemic turbocharged interest in this area and turbocharged interest not just at the federal level but provincially.
My comment about funding, I think, is objectively true if you look at budgets in the past, but it is absolutely true, I would say, that even among provincial colleagues and others, the demand for broadband went through the roof as a result of the pandemic. Everybody was at home. Kids were learning online. What had started as, I think, a laudable goal to advance the cause of connection became a kind of urgent priority that not just the federal government but provinces were wanting to step up and invest in.
Business was good, but it became very good as a result of the pandemic.