First of all, we're awaiting a decision from the Supreme Court of Canada. It's the case of the Criminal Lawyers’ Association weekly. It is in reference to a provision in the Ontario legislation. The Ontario legislation is framed such that it has a public interest override in most of its provision. Most of its exemptions are subject to that public interest override, but it has no such override for solicitor-client privilege information and, if I'm understanding correctly, law enforcement as well.
The issue is whether, as part of the analysis of this exemption, there should be an overall override, if you wish, based on paragraph 2(b) of the charter, which is the freedom of expression. I'm giving you a very cursory example; I'm not the expert in this case. Essentially, the issue to be determined would be whether or not access to information is part and parcel of paragraph 2(b) of the charter, which is freedom of expression.