I'm going to exercise the chair's discretion and ask a question, which may help us to get a little feedback over the last half hour or so that we have.
Backlogs seem to be at the heart of some of the problem here, and in the future that may not be a problem because of the technology and the open government issues. But right now, according to the Information Commissioner, the 30-day rule is the exception, not the rule. That's a problem. That is what was being contemplated by the act.
One of the recommendations the commissioner said to us is that there should be no extensions beyond 60 days without prior authorization or approval from the commissioner. It is a brand new triage responsibility, which may fall into your concern, Mr. Drapeau, about giving a little too much authority. But you have three items in front of you going for 210 days. The commissioner could short-circuit that and satisfy himself that there's reasonable cause to go beyond 60 days.
So I'd like to have your feedback as to that simple change to the act or the regulations, where there is the authority to intervene to ensure that any requests over the 60 days get prior approval.