Right, so it's the stop-start mechanism that was there before and obviously was well open. It was not regulated in any which way. It was hard to know who was doing what until the hammer came down, as it were—or the writ was dropped, I should say. Thank you for that.
Ms. Furlong, I've long been a fan of the voter information card, as it's technically called. I like to call it voter identification card—I'm putting my bias on the table—because I think it should be used as ID. Quite frankly, as you and others point out, this is really and truly the only national type of ID available.
I've talked on and on of stories about many seniors who tack this card on their refrigerators or to the wall and say, “This is my way of voting, and that card tells me I'm going to exercise my duty as a Canadian citizen.” Only when they got there did they find out that it's not part of identification whatsoever. People were absolutely dumbfounded.
I want you to drill into one aspect with which I didn't have a lot of experience, and that is the first nations. I didn't have a reserve at the time; I do now. In your work, how have you seen this voter information card becoming true ID to help out in first nations situations?