As I said, if you look at the Americans, they had very, very tight timelines, and they've put data out. There were some mistakes and they had to fix them. That was their approach to it, and they're very candid about it. That was the way they wanted to go about doing it. The Australians are going to take a different approach and be more measured.
But I think there are probably some things that can be done fairly quickly. The disclosure of access to information requests is not something that should be so difficult that it takes a lot of time to put into place, depending on the resources of various institutions. But it's really not something that should be that time-consuming.
The idea is to have an implementation plan, to have something that you can do in the short term, medium term, and longer term, and then you get organized and you have people who have proper accountabilities and are responsible for delivering on the results. So it has to be structured.
I cannot give you a timeline, because essentially it would be up to the government to put something like that in place, and certainly not the Information Commissioner. I don't have the mandate.