Going back to my point that doing this doesn't mean giving everybody in the country security clearance, I would go about it using a sectoral approach. For example, the banking industry and the financial industry have associations. You develop a memorandum of understanding with them that certain of their members are given security clearances, and they find a way of distributing this information in a non-classified way with their membership.
I'll use another medical analogy: Fighting against cancer is not helpful; you have to fight the specific kind of cancer. Therefore, just saying that we're going to clear all Canadians is not helpful. We have to find a way of narrowing the number of people and the number of institutions that we're talking about. I may be wrong, but I think the Government of Canada has 13 critical infrastructure industries. Pick three or four of those, like nuclear, financial, oil and gas—I have forgotten what they are—and develop an understanding with them that we're going to be a bit more open than we are now. Then see where we can go from there. Then, start spreading that out beyond the private sector with maybe the Canadian association of universities.
However, I'm not sure that going to a particular university and to a particular collection of professors and giving them security clearances alone would work in the short term. What I'm trying to say is that I don't think there's a silver bullet.