I think it's a fair statement. The issue centres on what kind of information is being requested. When that information falls under the scope of what the CBC calls and what we describe as “journalistic information”, looking for access to information of a journalistic nature, which, in its essence, is competitive, then the CBC has an issue.
The CBC is in a competitive world. It's been put there by successive governments and CRTC rulings. For the last 20 years, it has increasingly had to generate its own revenue. All this puts the CBC in a precarious situation. As a public broadcaster and as an entity, the CBC needs to put circles around the information that competitors may ask of it. It's a crown corporation, it's arm's length, and it's also operating in a competitive world. It's a bit of a mishmash. It's not there of its own choosing. It's there because of the rulings and decisions that have been made by past governments. It's there because of downsizing in budgets. Mr. Morrison was talking about funding issues. It ties into that also. In the last 11 to 15 years, government budgets have increased by 80%, departmental budgets have increased by 83%, but the CBC's allocation has increased by only 8%.
We're not in the same boat. We operate in an industry that is very competitive. When a competitor comes after you looking for information about all sorts of stuff, and drowns you in over 1,000 requests, it's trying to get at stuff that, as a competitor, it shouldn't have access to.
Maybe Karen has something she would like to add.