The corporation became a limited liability company in 2004, with two operational divisions: public broadcasting services and commercial broadcasting services. As a national public service broadcaster, the corporation operates 18 radio stations and three television stations, reaching about 24 million people daily. The SABC continued preparations for the migration to digital terrestrial television which will allow the corporation to increase the number of channels it offers as well as enhance its public broadcasting services by offering content in areas such as children's programming, news, sport, regional content, youth, women and education, as well as more comprehensive services in all languages and to communities with disabilities. The corporation continues to promote universal access to broadcasting services by switching on lower-power radio and television transmitters. These low-power transmitters broadcast television and radio signals at a very low cost to communities in historically marginalised communities and rural areas. Between 2008/9 and 2011/12, the corporation has switched on 1 216 low-power television transmitters and 557 low-power radio transmitters. During the 2008/9 financial year, the SABC faced a severe financial crisis alongside a serious corporate governance crisis. A guarantee of R1 billion was granted to the SABC. A monitoring task team continues to monitor performance of the SABC against the Government Guarantee targets.