Part of the information on this issue is going to be in the report cards, because they are focused on timeliness. Part of the problem is the lack of real data to do significant analysis of delays, extensions, and consultations, and I've been taking a significant look at this. The report cards are going to cover something that we don't have in the Treasury Board statistics, and that's the average completion time of these 24 departments at the core of the Access to Information Act at the federal level. So we will get a pretty good sense of what the average completion time is, and then we need to distill down the reasons for those. As far as I can tell, one of the key reasons for that and key problems in access to information—which I have been looking at recently—is consultations with other institutions, in particular, in relation to national security, foreign affairs, and law enforcement. There is one Treasury Board statistic on this that is incredibly compelling.
On March 30th, 2010. See this statement in context.