You're forcing me to get into my memory banks here a bit, but over time, of course, the main feature has been the increased use of the legislation to have access to information. So just the increase of requests has multiplied.
Over time, of course, the government, and I'm thinking here of the public service—let me say the public service—has occasionally revisited its processes and so forth to ensure that we were still meeting the requirements of the act, that we were being prompt enough, and that we had the right people, and so forth. I think that is a constant process that has been part of what senior managers of the public service have been doing.
I think it's a continual challenge to try to keep ahead of the demand, which has grown, I'd say, exponentially, and particularly over the last year or so. We simply have to keep ahead of the game. That's all I can say. So we need to continue to sit down with other senior public servants and try to find ways to do that, and talk to the information commissioner and ensure that we are doing as best we can to meet the requirements of the act.
I don't think anyone in the public service thinks for a minute that these requirements are going to go away. In fact, they are probably going to increase, and we have to be ready for that.