I would hope so. If it had a clear mandate for proactive disclosure practices, it could deal through a pool of talent and avoid all this extra time consultations with the Department of Foreign Affairs, the Privy Council Office, and the Department of National Defence, because those guys would all be in there together, even if they're delegated to departments.
They would also have the right to appeal to the Information Commissioner if they're not allowed to do their job. Part of the problem right now is they're stifled. They're in confined departments. They're issued a set of guidelines from an agency that doesn't show leadership, and that itself is very secretive. I'm trying to look for ways in which the mindset that their first job is gatekeepers applying complicated procedures, fees, and exemptions is no longer their main mandate. And I've thought time and time again that there are good people in the system, but they need much more of a framework and a body so they can do their jobs properly.