In my experience, I went through the sponsorship scandal, obviously, and everybody said things were going to improve. What I have witnessed since 2006 is a deterioration in society. The more the federal government accepts it, the more society accepts corruption, and you start looking at what people are representing. The government is representing the worst and not the best. In terms of access, when we're trying to get the information out, again, it is giving us the worst, not the best that it can give us—with some exceptions; don't get me wrong. Many access officers really want to do a good job, but their hands are tied by the legislation, by what's going on.
I've had misinformation given to me, and the answer is, when I'm challenging it, “Go to the Information Commissioner.” I'm saying, “Well, wait a second; I can prove you're wrong when you're telling me I can't have something, but you're saying I have to go to the Information Commissioner.”
There doesn't seem to be a good solution under the present act. We are a third world country with our legislation, and there's no denying it. We cannot maintain.... We're up there; we're a third world country.