Well, there are a number of types of access to information requests. At the provincial government level, for example, there are environmental assessments of property. There are still many jurisdictions in which, to get the results of an environmental assessment of a property, you go through an access to information request. Data such as that could be made available online. The results of environmental assessments of properties could be made available online; the data could be released without the need for a request. Certainly citizens make requests for information that that would fall into the category of data that would be otherwise available through an open government approach. That would potentially be one of the efficiencies that would be gained.
A while back I had a conversation with one of the senior provincial government people, who indicated that their ministry spends something like $10 million or $12 million a year responding to access of information requests, with an average cost of something like $2,400 each. Many of those requests could be addressed through having data already available so that the information would not need to be asked for. That is an important matter, and we think it represents an opportunity.