Parliament has very limited constitutional authority to legislate in relation to voting. The Supreme Court of Canada has made it clear that section 3 of the Charter of Rights is one of the most absolute sections there is. It's immune from the notwithstanding clause, and unlike, say, freedom of speech, which you weigh against rights of other people, it has no countervailing rights. It's an absolute right, and there's a strict requirement for Parliament to justify anything that creates an obstacle to anybody voting.
I've read the report this committee filed in Parliament in June 2006, when the committee acknowledged it has no notion of the scale of voter fraud, if any. This is the material we're going to be bringing before the court, and I would suggest rather than the matter simply going ahead in one province, that Parliament fix the problem coast to coast.