Mr. Chair, I just want to address Mr. Preston's point.
We're not establishing the other criteria here. They are later in the bill, and there's a vouching procedure in place. What we are establishing is that someone can say this person's residence is in fact this place, notwithstanding that it's often a difficult situation in terms of establishing the residence you and I are fortunate to have. The reason I can do it is that I am here; I'm someone who is employed on a full-time basis, sometimes as a volunteer, at this place--in this church, in this drop-in centre. It's simply to say that I know this person and that this person's address is this place. That's what we're establishing here. We're not establishing the other criteria.
I just wanted to clarify that. We're not saying that we're vouching for the other piece; that's later in the bill. This simply establishes the fact that it's their residence. There's no other way of determining that for people who are in this situation. I just don't know how we deal with this unless we have a procedure like this in place.