--so if she gets it, my guess is that there'd be something of a reticence to use it. I think that any person in that position, regardless of who the particular commissioner happens to be, would recognize that ordering another government department to act in a certain way is the sort of thing you would do only in the most extreme of circumstances.
Indeed, if we can imbue within our federal government that notion of a privacy culture, one that is consistent with the act, one would hope that you'd never need to actually resort to the order-making power. But the fact that it is there I think would perhaps help move some of those cases along.