Thank you, Madam Chair. As I had indicated earlier, it's not a matter of whether it's bright enough to see a vehicle coming down the road, it's a matter of safety. People are often walking around, distracted, worrying about their problems: whether they have enough food at home; whether their motor boat is going to start if they're going hunting; worried about things at their job, and sometimes they're not looking where they're going, whether you're walking or whether you're driving. It's quite easy, if you're walking around, to not notice a vehicle that's coming. But if that vehicle has lights on, you notice it right away. And this is a proven fact. The study I had indicated earlier had done tests and they found that this is a proven fact.
Also, when you have 24 hours of daylight or long hours of daylight, once it starts getting dark again, people often forget to turn their lights on. I notice that around town here, that happens a lot. Once it starts getting dark ... You're used to it not getting dark, then it slowly starts getting dark earlier and earlier, but people don't turn their lights on. So I think it doesn't matter if we have 24 hours of daylight. It will increase the safety for pedestrians and particularly children and elderly people. Thank you.