From the perspective of its role, does Treasury Board see that? Well, our answer would have to be no, we do not see that. On the other hand, if there were 25,000 ATIP requests in 2004-2005 and about 1,500 or 1,600 are subject to further research, the Information Commissioner will report on some of them in his report. That report does not deal with the 1,500 cases per year. With each one, if I understood what Mr. Leadbeater said, the complaint is not the reason for the disclosure of an applicant's name. It may be through investigating another complaint that he realizes that information has been disclosed or that people have talked about it. But the way the system is currently structured, the Commissioner does not report on every complaint. We do not have access to all his investigations and reports, because that is a confidential process. It's a little difficult for us to know as much about this as the Commissioner, because he is really on the ground. He investigates, he can use pressure, he can go in and investigate in a specific area, for example, or about a specific complaint, and then determine whether there is anything else involved; or he may go off in a different direction. I hope that answers your question somewhat.
On October 4th, 2006. See this statement in context.