I find the more I stay in politics the more of a digital atheist I become. I used to be a digital believer in the peaceable kingdom that we were going to create.
I represent a rural riding that's bigger than Great Britain. Many of my communities have no roads, and where the Trans-Canada Highway goes through my riding, I have businesses that can't get Internet services on the Trans-Canada Highway. In my little communities, the libraries are full of kids after school, not because they are reading books but because they don't have Internet at home.
To follow-up on my colleague, we are the face of government for them, because they get told to go online, but what they are dealing with is a world that is increasingly like Kafka in a world of smart phones, because what government expects from people—your child tax benefits, your EI, your disability claims—are becoming increasingly complicated. Having a new interface doesn't change that. In fact, it disenfranchises people, because they become more frustrated, so they end up in our offices all the time, and we're having to go through and do the forms.
It's not your responsibility to deal with the inanity of government, the paper and the evidence, but when you talk about making it easier for people, what I see as the question is that it's great you have all the bells and whistles on the service, but if they can't access a way to get through that, then they become even more disenfranchised than if they were just told to mail it.