Mr. Chair, maybe I'll start with that.
I would like to just mention broadly the community and those ATIP coordinators. Before I had this role, I was in a department working with ATIP coordinators as one of the subject matter experts in a program area. Since I've been in this role, I guess I've been extremely impressed. Those ATIP coordinators are very much the champions of access to information. They are the community that's really, really pushing for that.
So I couldn't necessarily agree with it being a double-edged sword. I think they really are probably some of the best allies. They are the ones working with their departments to make sure it does work the way the legislation says.
In terms of policy and legislation and the possible reform that we could do, I would hate to actually start to make that up as I'm sitting here, but I know we carry out conversations with the Information Commissioner. With the new Information Commissioner, we've had some very good conversations already in terms of how we can work cooperatively.
In the context of the legislation, those complaints that come in to the Information Commissioner are extremely valuable sources of things that haven't worked in individual instances. That's about 5% or so, something like that. That's a good sample there. As well, the data that we would be gathering as part of...[Technical difficulty--Editor]...the statistics that we will be gathering, we're also looking with the Information Commissioner on what sorts of statistics would be valuable so that we can actually start to get insight into where things aren't working, either from his perspective or from the perspective of citizens and businesses as they're going at it.