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I just had a little discussion with our analyst and researcher about where we are right now and your interventions today on your annual report. Certainly there is a significant overlap with the business item that this committee has been engaged in for the last two meetings, which is the response of the justice minister to the committee report on quick fixes to the Access to Information Act.
In the middle of that consideration Mr. Martin made a motion, which still has not been disposed of, but it is in fact not a new item of business. That happens to be a motion within an existing item of business, being the response of the justice minister to the act.
So we haven't quite resolved that and how the committee is going to deal with it. Certainly the motion is one aspect. It basically speaks for itself. It's just that the committee is not happy with the response, but that doesn't do anything to help us with the act.
This item will be on our business for Thursday. I've asked the researchers to prepare a list of items that are still outstanding concerns.
I am very concerned, Acting Commissioner, that the jousting that is going on not only among members but maybe even between the commission and the prior minister, etc., is not a healthy approach to moving forward on constructive measures related to the Access to Information Act.
I am very concerned that this could simply bang the gavel and the subject matter's closed. It's basically that the minister at this time is not open to any changes and the committee has put itself in a position where we can just say we don't agree with you. But this doesn't help the outstanding issues that we have.
I don't think it's in the best interest of the public and I don't think it's in the best interest of the committee that we terminate this discussion. I said earlier that we need to vet some of these things, whether it be the cost recovery issues that Mr. Dechert has been raising since the very beginning or some of the issues that you have raised today with regard to double-counting problems.
It's simply the fact that there are proxies out there who are requesting information on behalf of larger numbers of people. You probably will never understand or never know just how broad the interest and the concern is. If you eliminated all the proxy or all those commercial players, how many individuals would then come forward in the numbers?
I think the numbers have to be in terms of number of complaints, number of requests, etc. It has to be taken that every year we report is probably going to have the same level of fuzz in it, so that on a macro basis it's probably relatively comparative. I'm not overly concerned about that, but I am concerned there are some issues that continue to be of concern to members.
The point I was going to try to make is that if we don't make changes in a minority government, it's very unlikely we will be making them in a majority government. This is the time, in my view. That's a comment. I don't want your response because it's unfair.
I appeared on the Right to Know Week panel, which you referred to in your opening remarks. First of all, I enjoyed it very much. I thought the panel that I was on just gave a wealth of information. I know you have captured an awful lot of that. I hope the members will have an opportunity to be apprised in one way or another of some of the wisdom that came out of those number of sessions. I was on only one panel of a large number of panels.
I would remind you that at the very end, the moderator of my panel said, “After you finish your remarks, I want you to give me your top two recommendations for consideration”. I'm not sure if you recall, but I was the last speaker in a panel of about seven or eight people, and everything I wanted to say had already been said. So that made it really difficult.
I basically set my speech aside and concentrated on two areas. One was what came up today about the Mexico situation and proactive disclosure. It is something we have not really given serious thought to. It is something I think should be given serious thought, because it does mean that governments would not wait for a request but would simply post on the web all those matters that are accessible under the act. The only things that would not be posted would be matters of national security or cabinet confidences.
It would change the whole situation that we are talking about. It would solve so many of the problems.
I'm asking you whether or not proactive disclosure is an approach you believe this committee may want to consider, and whether we should maybe even visit or bring witnesses from the Mexican authorities to talk to us about the process they went through, where they are, and whether or not it is applicable to us.
Is that something you think this committee may want to consider?