Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
This is a very delicate matter since we may have to take some positions that might exclude them. I'm talking about homeless persons in particular.
Mrs. Hall, could you answer the following question?
My party and I would certainly no want to marginalize people or to exclude them from society since they are already far too marginalized. As far as the right to vote is concerned, I want to understand the process in detail.
Those people may not have any identification. They may be addicted to drugs or alcohol. Some homeless people may be mentally ill. When they are institutionalized or hospitalized, their health card is kept at the registration desk of the hospital. There is a file about them at the hospital.
I repeat, I am not an expert about homelessness. One sees these people in the streets but I wonder how they could be identified at the polling booth. How could we do that? My question follows somewhat from Mr. Lukiwski's. How can we make sure that they really are canadian citizens?
Take the matter of their name. In my neighborhood, all the homeless persons I meet when I go and get my soup call me Ti-Bob or Bill. Nobody knows my real name. It may also happen that, because of my illness, I don't even remember my own name. I'm just Bill or Ti-Bob.
What can we do to integrate them and to allow them to exercise their right to vote? I don't want my questions to be seen as biased or as being in favor of exclusion. On the contrary, we should try to ensure their integration but I would like to know how it could be done.