In terms of the provinces and territories, there are eight jurisdictions now that do require these meetings. There may be more, but as of a year or two ago, there were eight. There are two reasons this was not made part of the system for the House of Commons and the cabinet. You have 308 members, and you are going to have more in the future. That's three times as big as the Ontario legislature. How do you have these meetings within 60 days? It's a huge load. Then, the other reason is that the commissioner is responsible for about 3,500 other public office holders outside of Parliament. That's a huge scope of responsibility that most other commissioners don't have.
How do you deal with this? What occurs to me is that you could have the commissioner, who would meet personally with all of the cabinet ministers, and two deputy commissioners, who could be staff who are currently in the office, who would meet with the other MPs. Then there could be an assistant commissioner to handle all of the public office holders outside of Parliament. There are ways of doing it, but I think those are the reasons why it didn't get into the system in the first place.