Okay. In this particular case I’ve been dealing with the Minister’s office and they haven’t really been that flexible on it. I kind of question the deputy minister on that and I’ll be glad to resubmit my inquiry in support of my constituents in that matter. We’ll leave that for now.
Then I have another instance where a nephew does not actually live with the elder. He might stay over one, two or three times a month, yet frontline workers are saying that person is actually a resident in that household but he’s got no fixed address. He’s one of our young people who loves to travel. He spends two or three days a month. What’s their definition of a household, somebody that lives in the household? This senior was actually approved for fuel subsidy and the frontline worker said no, I saw a nephew there so the nephew is living there. He lives in the household so we want all his documentation if he worked or not last year. We’re, like, that person doesn’t live there. So what’s their definition of who lives in the household and how strictly do you enforce it? Does that person have to be there 20 days a month? How do they determine who lives in the household when their whole family knows that person doesn’t live there at all. It’s the same like me. Sometimes I get friends or cousins that stay a day or two but they’re not really living in my household. I’d like to know the department’s stance on this issue.