Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you to the witnesses.
It's a very complex situation and study that we're having here, so I may be out of context a little bit, but my personal problem in trying to access information has been either timeliness or getting the right information when I do actually get the information, which is what I think we've been discussing here.
In your opinion, when would you go to see the Information Commissioner if the information that is given to you is not 100% there? How do you know if you're actually missing information? I understand that you get the blacked out or blank pages, but when would it be worthwhile from a practical perspective to see the commissioner and say that you need more information when they've given you perhaps 50%?
I'm a member of the finance committee. I remember that last year we requested some backup information on income trusts. I think 280 out of 300 pages were blanked out. That was obvious, but what happens if you get the reverse? Let's say you get 20 pages blacked out or you get 20 blank pages in a 300-page document. Would that be a situation where we would go and see the Information Commissioner? That's the practical end of it. Also, we've talked about timeliness. How long would all of this take?