Actually, I asked him. You may remember that in his testimony last Thursday he listed off items he said he didn't think would qualify. Passports were one of them. It doesn't have your address on it so I can't count it under proposed paragraph (b), one of the two pieces of identification, but it also can't be counted under proposed paragraph (a) because it doesn't have your address either. So this was meant to allow that kind of identification, which is pretty secure, along with something that has your address.
To answer Karen's question, she said like a utility bill, and the answer to that would be that if the Chief Electoral Officer, with the concurrence of this committee, agrees that a utility bill counts, it does; and if he doesn't and we don't, then it wouldn't count.