First, honourable member, we haven't costed it because we're crossing our fingers that it will be recommended by this committee, and then, of course, we would cost it. If committee members wish, we could supply you with the amount of our public education budget for PIPEDA to give you an idea. Now, these are organizations across Canada, so it might not be exactly the same.
I mentioned funding research across the country in universities, small business, and citizens' organizations, and providing information to what in PIPEDA are called interested stakeholders. These are organizations that use PIPEDA and need help in its interpretation. If you translate that into the Privacy Act, these could be campaigns with national security organizations to clarify the problems they would have in applying the Privacy Act and to see how we could work better with them. It could be working with citizens who ask what their rights are now that our frontiers are becoming increasingly problematic in terms of privacy rights, or perhaps working with the Canada Border Services Agency.
All of this takes a certain amount of investment in media communications to get more up-to-date information brought out more quickly, and particularly to get young people interested in issues of privacy as they relate to government use of their personal information.