Well, we have a very large exemption at the CBC, because information gathered for journalistic, artistic, and literary purposes is excluded from the act. That is basically our core business. So for us it's simply about employees, pretty much—aside from our selling tickets to shows sometimes.
We have a portion of a person who is a privacy officer. We have one person, somewhat more than a clerk—well, a good deal more than a clerk, a professional records manager—who also handles privacy requests. We have a portion of a lawyer. I am the privacy person at CBC. In fact, I'm no longer the privacy coordinator; we now have a compliance officer, Meg Angevine, who's with me in the room, as a privacy officer. Then there is the time spent when all of the other departments—principally human resources and finance—are looking for information.
It's hard to put a figure on it, but I can say, at least for us, who have this large exclusion, that we have about—though maybe I'm being too generous—a third of the time of a senior person, half the time of a more junior person, and probably a quarter of my time being dedicated to this. And then there is the time spent by all the people looking for information.