Okay.
Let me turn to the question of institutional residences. One of the problems that I think occurred, and we saw this in Etobicoke—Centre, was with what the current vouching system actually does not provide. Getting rid of vouching will have no influence on people who are in areas serviced by mobile polls. In this case we're talking about seniors who no longer have a driver's licence and many other forms of ID, but nobody doubts that they are who they say they are. They are in an institution to which access is limited. That would be true in other residential institutional settings as well, such as correctional facilities.
In such a situation, I wonder whether the solution would be to design a special system—I'm not sure if it would be vouching or something else—that simply is not drawing upon the current system, because you aren't going to find other people living in the same poll who can provide a vouching service. One possibility would be to require or compel institutions to provide information to Elections Canada. Perhaps vouching by someone who is a spouse of that individual could be allowed. The point is that it's a specific problem that requires a specific solution. It's not part of the broader problem of voter ID elsewhere.
Can I ask for your thoughts on that?