My clear sense of the proportion of actual cost that is recovered from fees is that it is minimal. Certainly it's not substantial.
I think that's for a variety of reasons. Some public bodies--and we do cover over 2,000 of them, at all levels in British Columbia--simply have a policy decision that they're not going to charge for access to information. Again, we have a high number of individual requesters seeking their own personal information, and under our law they cannot be charged for access to their own information. In the main, as a key component of the democratic governance system that has evolved in Canada, I think it's also a recognition that these laws are not intended to be on a commercial footing. That's subject to what I said about commercial requesters, of course.