We have experienced a number of problems with respect to some of these services that already exist. We had to take the minister responsible for old age security to court a number of years ago. Our elders' benefits were being reviewed and a large number of them were being cut off, simply because when the people who process these applications in the public service looked at some of the real dynamics of Akwesasne, automatically a red flag flew up. This would be the same concern.
We would be prepared to enter into discussions on how we can find solutions, but I will tell you that the area in the yellow portion of our map, which is in Quebec, actually has an area code that is an Ontario area code—613—when the rest of the region has a 514 number. When people are on the outside looking in, they see an Ontario area code and a Quebec mailing address. Also, in some cases their bank statements may be from an Ontario bank, because there's no bank—there are very few services—in the Quebec portion. As well, in some cases, these people may possess ironworkers' cards or may work in the United States for periods of time and may have a health benefit because they're an ironworker.
When they look at some documentation at a high level, it gets flagged from the systemic processing of benefits in terms of “do they really reside there?”, and that would be concern. It's that this could happen in mass numbers with respect to—