Perfect. Okay.
The next question is about the whole issue of students, the low student turnout and the confusion about where students can actually vote, given their fluctuating residences, etc.
You have some good ideas, and you've heard some ideas from the members here, but what about student-only polling stations in the educational institutions? Would the law as it now stands permit this? Would it require an amendment to the law? And do you think it's something that could possibly be part of the solution, if there were polling stations for students in the CEGEPs, the colleges, and the universities? And would you staff them primarily with students? They want that money, and it may be a way to draw in more of the student vote and to get more of them involved.
I am putting that out as a suggestion—and I have to say that this suggestion comes from my parliamentary intern.
And I have a final question.
In the small yellow box, where the report deals with pre-election spending on advertising, the second sentence in the third paragraph reads as follows:
Elections Canada considers that a householder that is in transit before the issue of a writ and has reached the stage where the member of Parliament no longer has the ability to stop its delivery prior to the issue of that writ will not be considered to have been used during the election period even if its actual delivery to the recipient takes place during the election.
Now according to Elections Canada, when is the member of Parliament no longer able to cancel the delivery of a householder?