The legislation does require consultation with third parties. Also, there are policy guidelines from Treasury Board mandating all institutions to consult with the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade on issues of foreign affairs and security, with Department of Justice on solicitor-client privilege issues, and with the Privy Council Office on cabinet confidences, but there is no incentive in the legislation to do this in a timely fashion.
So what we find is government serving government, and consultation spin. Consequently, if I'm in the Canada Border Services Agency and I have to consult PCO, my reflex is to take a 120-day extension, because I know it's not going to come out of PCO within that time and I'm going to be accused of not meeting my timeline. So these consultations have a pervasive impact.
What I said is that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, for instance, should be given dedicated resources to deal with consultations, and then deal with its own ATIP request independently. One gets hostage to the other, in many institutions.