We use shared services quite a bit, as Madame Michaud has explained.
With respect to communications, should the will of Parliament be to join the two offices, I think there would be efficiencies gained in the communications of both the Privacy Commissioner and the Information Commissioner.
As it stands now—and I say this with a very firm conviction—I cannot cut these corporate services any more than I have cut them. People who work in internal services in my office work, seriously, umpteen times compared with what they would be experiencing in any other government institution. I am extremely thankful that they are staying with my office, because we are understaffed in all of those services.
We have an up-to-date Internet page for communications. Posting on the Internet has to be done in both official languages. It has to be verified. It also has to be managed for accessibility. We have to code it for accessibility. I think it's unrealistic not to have a Twitter account in this day and age, and not to follow what's going on in the media. This is in part what these communications officers do.