Well, to suggest that the legislature back in 1982.... And I purposely reflected upon the fact that both the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the access right, which is a quasi-constitutional right, were passed within the same session of Parliament and have been in existence since then, and there is a scheme inside the act to name an officer of Parliament, the Information Commissioner, who in Canada has the mandate and the powers to investigate a complaint. To suggest that this is not good enough, and the Information Commissioner.... To this day, there has never been a leak. I mean, there has never been any confidential information obtained during her investigation that has ever been handled in anything but in accordance with the law. To suggest that's not good enough.... They have the expertise, the people, the mandate, and the law on their side. That we have to go to a judge and ignore this bureaucracy, this expertise, and so on, and not only go to the court, but it has got to be a court that says, as we say.... It has been to court, the Federal Court, and the decision is quite readable and quite reasonable and quite acceptable to all. That decision by Mr. Justice Boivin says, basically, the Information Commissioner is only doing her job, and by the way, when doing her job she may agree in some cases that records for which an exemption is claimed under section 68.1 is appropriate.
That was not good enough. We're now before the Federal Court of Appeal, which had a hearing on October 18.
First of all, the suggestion that this is the way to do it would imply that the only recourse for requesters, not only myself but ordinary Canadians, asking for records from the CBC, where the CBC asks that records be redacted under section 68.1, is to go to court. You are talking thousands of dollars to have a judicial review, as opposed to going to the Information Commissioner, which is provided as a complaint mechanism free of charge. I find that condescending.