Frankly, I don't see it. There are two issues. The first issue is that I have the right to review documents, which could include journalistic sources. In my view, because of the confidentiality of the provision, it does not mean that journalistic sources are compromised.
The second issue is that there does not exist, at this time, a full-fledged protection of journalistic sources anyway, which goes to the point of your colleague. When people say there's a potential of disclosure, well, there is a potential now that journalistic sources can be disclosed because they can be disclosed by a court under the Wigmore test.
It's not an absolute privilege; it's not an absolute protection. That is the status quo right now.
I'm not going to comment on an amendment I haven't seen, but please consider this: you are going to create another difficult situation if we create another exclusion to an exemption. How that's going to work, I really don't know. I haven't seen any amendments. I really don't know how that would work, in practice.
If it's going to happen, my recommendation would be to have a mandatory exemption, not an exclusion. This would mean it would be mandatory for the CBC to protect journalistic sources. That would still allow me to review the matters.
I'll tell you why I think it's best if I'm allowed to review the matters. We have this all the time in matters of national security, in terms of human sources. You can have a whole document where there are human sources being referred to in the document. Then there are other types of information that may allow you to identify the human source, and then there's other peripheral information that the institution could claim allows the journalistic source to be identified. It's not so simple.
So far, we have not had any case that dealt with journalistic sources. It is not a big issue. Is it worth complicating the act and adding an exclusion to an exemption? My advice is no.