My response is, absolutely. Proactive disclosure requires no legislative amendment. It's a matter of policy and leadership.
The Treasury Board minister, following a certain amount of abuse by senior public servants, including the Radwanski affair, which I know something about, ordered that all expenses, restaurant and travel, travel category and hotel expenses and otherwise be posted on the respective websites. To this day, I think the number of requests that used to be filed to get those has disappeared. It's evaporated. Indeed, the complaints to my office because they were being delayed have evaporated. Because it's posted. There's a whole ream of information.
On the one hand, the government could do a snow job on the public by putting so much up there. It would be very difficult to find out what's important and what's not.