I would like to make one brief observation on the subject of election workers. In fact, we share our provincial workers, that is, they are the same people as the ones who do the work at the federal and municipal levels. However, they mix up the rules to be applied. They apply the rules for one to the other, and so on, because they forget. If we have two different rules, one for the Sunday and the other for the Monday, we have a problem. There is a lot of creativity in the system. We have to think of that.
In terms of encouraging young people to vote, in Saskatchewan we established two initiatives, this time around. We tried to reach them. We have publications designed for young people that talk about performances that are happening, and so on. We inserted a voting guide into that newspaper, so that we could reach them. We also used workers, what are called Community Relations Officers, who go out to connect with young people at university.
So these are initiatives that we have established. It is difficult to say what their effect will be, because in my province young people have a choice. If they are attending university, they can vote based on their place of permanent residence, where their parents live, based on their university residence or based on the apartment they are renting. So no statistics are typically kept on young people.