I think the notion of business value is tied to the idea that the records that need to be kept need to relate to those functions the department carries out. So the analytical framework is linked very much to what work the particular entity is doing.
I mentioned that this concept of information resources of business value is linked to an international standard. There's an ISO standard. I think it's 15489, but I might have my number just a little bit wrong. It speaks to this issue, and our work is consistent with that framework. Certainly, within the business of government institutions, the notion of accountability, transparency, and keeping records that support decision-making are part of the business of government institutions. That's reflected in the directive on recordkeeping, which establishes the objectives and the expected results and deals explicitly with transparency and accountability. So the goal of effective recordkeeping is to create transparency and accountability.
We're speaking of records as they're managed within departments for departmental purposes. At some point in time, Library and Archives Canada gets interested in those documents for their historical purpose, and those that are assessed by our professionals as being the appropriate records to be preserved for all time are transferred to us. That's only a small segment of the total number of records the government creates. They are different from those records that might have business value for departments. They might have business value for five years; they might have business value for 50 years.