Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and my apologies for not being here. I was at another committee for the first hour, from 11 to 12. I'm called “the committee guru” around here.
Sir, I have a question for you, and this may not be the right time to bring this up, but maybe it should have been brought up before the bill was even drafted. I'm thinking of all the remote areas in the Prairies, where I live, and also in the Northwest Territories, where people primarily use box numbers or whatever to get their mail.
Everybody, or I should say, most people—the homeless would be an exception—live at a specific place, and that specific place can easily be identified using what are commonly called GPS coordinates, latitude and longitude. I have a little Canadian Tire GPS worth about $220 that locates my location, where I live, to within about 10 feet. It's just for sports people.
Have you considered, or would it be reasonable to say, that for people to identify where they live in Canada and which riding they would be in, you would use GPS coordinates? You'd have to enumerate that location but once, and then after that, basically, those points don't move. Have you considered that?