Thank you, Chair.
I'd like to thank you three gentlemen for appearing before the committee.
It's been interesting listening to testimony on this subject for the past little while. I'll address this question to you, Mr. Drapeau, or Marc Racicot.
I read your report and I was a bit stunned that we have a statute that's essentially over 25 years old and it has essentially seen no amendments. We have an opportunity to look at changing it because, obviously, it was enacted before the Internet. There have been significant technological changes. I was stunned that you came up quite strongly against all the recommendations. I am surprised, given where we are technologically and how far behind we're lagging in terms of access to information around the world, how you could say that the act is really working. I agree there's probably a cultural issue in terms of releasing information that has to be addressed, but I just can't square a 25-year-old statute that has never been revisited as something that is great, when we're clearly lagging behind other jurisdictions around the globe.