In my opening remarks I did list a number of the factors that contribute to our belief that even though the fundamental relationship between the citizen and their government is relatively static, the information management practices, the complexity of the information that's collected, the consequences of that are changing just as rapidly in the government sphere as in the private sector.
While we're not purporting to say that a full comprehensive review needs to be done every five years, at the minimum there needs to be a bit of a reality check to make sure that this important piece of legislation that's been identified by the Supreme Court of Canada as being quasi-constitutional actually does keep up with the requirements of modern society. And it's our view that it hasn't. The world has changed significantly. The government information practices have changed very significantly since 1982, and it's very difficult to say what the next five years, ten years, fifteen years are going to look like.