Thank you for the question.
I'm happy to relate the B.C. experience as briefly as I can. It's the only experience we know in British Columbia, beginning in 1993, with the enactment of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, which is the provincial public sector access to information and to privacy protection legislation. It covers over 2,000 public bodies in British Columbia. We've had an order-making power, and that is also the case, as you've said, under the Personal Information Protection Act. Since the beginning of 2004, we've had an order-making power.
However, it has to be emphasized that it is by no means the tool of first choice for our office, speaking for myself or indeed looking at the experience of our office. Looking again at the public sector experience, we always refer complaints about privacy issues or access to information appeals—and we have order-making power in that respect as well—to mediation by one of my colleagues. And we settle something like 88% to 91% of all those matters by mediation.
That's the approach that we're taking under PIPA as well. We refer complaints to mediation. In the three years, just about, that PIPA has been in force, I've issued seven binding orders under PIPA. The remainder of the matters we have been able to deal with in a mediation type of approach, which is consistent with the approach taken, as I understand it, in every important respect, here in Ottawa by my federal colleague and in other commissioners' offices across the country.
We have other tools as well. For example, we can refer would-be complainants back to the organization in question, which we do in many cases, to try to resolve the matter first, as a private matter, if you will. We also can refer individuals to other appropriate processes--for example, the grievance and arbitration process, if there's a collective agreement in place--which we do quite regularly, or to the human rights process as well. We sometimes refer them to mediation by private sector organizations, for example, as such chambers of commerce. And we also use our powers to educate consumers and organizations, as we've done in the public sector, and to produce supportive resources for them, guidance, if you will, on interpretation and application in a very practical sense, at least as best we can, to implementation of legislation, to try proactively to avoid complaints arising in the first instance.
So there's a whole array of tools, and the order-making power is far from the first one we reach for. In fact, in many respects, you could say it's the last tool we reach for.