I'd be happy to address that.
Certainly this has not proved to be a concern in British Columbia. We find that removal of the citizenship restriction would not present those kinds of risks--in my estimation, certainly. I understand that there are differences between the kind of information held provincially and federally, but in B.C. we do not have a citizenship restriction. It is easily circumvented in any case, because there are professional access requesters or friends or family resident in Canada who are fully able to make requests on behalf of others. And certainly under the British Columbia legislation, public bodies are able to seek our authority to not respond to frivolous, vexatious, or abusive requests--requests that are an abuse of the right of access. When it comes to the substantive protections, British Columbia law fully protects law enforcement and national security interests because it contains robust exemptions that are designed to and do successfully protect those interests very fully.