Yes. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
It's pretty obvious, Mr. Chair, with the declining mail volumes and the increased financial pressures, that something has to happen. The Conference Board spoke earlier to the need to address it. They came out with some ideas. Canada Post went beyond that and did some extensive consultation, and the consultations were quite widely available. Whether or not Canadians took full advantage of them is perhaps open to question.
I'd just like to ask Mr. Kelly something. I'm also a former CFIB member, and I would welcome that report, by the way, of the survey results. At one point we were filling in those surveys. Now, as members of Parliament, we're recipients of them all, so thank you.
On the question of the cost of the mail, obviously through this whole time we're talking about going from 63¢ up to $1, but that $1 is based on the price of one stamp. If the stamps are bought in quantity, I think it's 85¢, and if it's at a business meter, it's 75¢. Could you just tell me what the increase is at the business meter level? Because I think that's more indicative of what the cost would be to that small business owner who's mailing 20,000 pieces of mail.