It would be only part of the problem. Our problem is that we have those electors assigned to a polling division, meaning that we know where they live and reside. The problem is that the places where they reside don't have a civic address; hence the civic address, which is required under the act, will not find its way onto documents that are required to establish residence at the time of voting.
I want to insist on that aspect. When we talk about a million electors who could be disenfranchised with the legislation, it's not that those electors are not assigned to a polling division, either through revision or various processes we have in place to associate electors with the place of residence; their problem is that they don't have any documents to show the place of residence as a municipal or civic address.