Certainly.
Area of management number 12 is effectiveness of information management. There are 19 areas of management. Each area of management has what we call lines of evidence—we try to do evidence-based decision-making and evaluation, in this context. Until this round of the management accountability framework, there were only four. The fifth one, which we just added, is around recordkeeping practice. So there is a direct correlation between what we've done in our management accountability framework—assessment of area of management 12—and this directive.
Of the other four, the first one deals with whether there is proper governance in place. You can see how that one would have linked with the information management policy. Then we ask whether there is a strategy and plan in place, which should help to address where we are going to find the resources and how we are going to get these policies implemented in our organization.
Now we have the question, is there proper governance; is there a strategy and plan; and now we're adding practices.
The other two lines of evidence that come under effectiveness of information management are access to information and privacy compliance. That is the department's compliance with the act: whether they are tabling the report they're supposed to table in Parliament, and the like. So we have within that area of management the link between how information management can affect access to information and privacy compliance.