Yes. We have the opportunity to investigate to make sure the material that is supposed to come out does come out. We basically get to see the material and to make sure that if it comes out it meets the requirements of the act, and if it doesn't, it meets the requirements of the act.
What I'm concerned about here is that sometimes when you see an audit—an audit is an investigation—I don't think you should see the working papers of the audit until the audit has been completed. It's just like what we do in almost every other thing: when documents are asked for, we use those documents to trace back the flow of a policy and the flow of a decision.
In the same way, when we're looking at audits, we have to be able to go back to look at the original documents and the investigation to be able to assure that things have gone the way they have. The act is a very complex one, as I have said before, because it means that every time there is a request for information coming in, the 13 exemptions come into play, and each one of those 13 exemptions in the act applies to every document that goes out under the Access to Information Act and/or through the government's releasing it on its own.