I think it's the regulatory issue. If we look at some of the smartest cities in the world, none of them have had their infrastructure built by the private sector. None of the Bells and Teluses and the comparables of the world have been able to put in sufficient bandwidth to make a city smart, because it doesn't work out for them financially. It's not because they are bad guys; it's just that their business model doesn't allow them to make those kinds of investments.
Just as we took the independent water and independent road out of the hands of the private sector, I think we have that kind of opportunity here. I think your mechanism for doing that is probably the CRTC where they can encourage that kind of behaviour.
Nobody wants to have to go to court to try to do the right thing, but that seems to be where we are now. In St. Louis, Chattanooga, Barcelona, and other cities where they have done this, it has had to be led through government regulatory freedom, if you like, to set it aside.
I think now is the time for that too, because if we look at the larger organizations, the Bells and the Teluses, they have stopped making money from the fibre and have started making money on content. So I think they are ready to have that conversation now, but somebody needs to take the leadership, and, frankly, I think your body is the best placed.