We haven't pegged a figure for it. There are benchmarks in the system. The Privacy Commissioner has this authority. Some of our provincial colleagues have also. As is my usual way, I would advocate a prudent and progressive approach to it.
Right now no one is doing this. The Treasury Board Secretariat has a mandate to educate and train the public servants. I have an advocacy mandate, which sometimes gets the Treasury Board quite uncomfortable depending on how far I'm going. I really can't justify taking investigative resources and putting it into printing pamphlets. But there is no one there, certainly no one independent of government, who has the mandate to educate citizens on their rights.
I'll give you a brief example, Mr. Chairman, from the press conference I held on the report two weeks ago. An experienced reporter aggressively asked me a question about why I was not exercising the full powers of the commissioner and why was I not simply ordering this information to be released. I had to gently remind him in front of all his colleagues that I don't have order-making powers. I can only recommend. So there are myths around the statute that could be easily dispelled by simple education and didactic material.