Mr. Chair, it's not my place to comment on how the government decides to proceed with legislation and so on. As Information Commissioner, I do believe that the act is ripe for reform. The calls for reform started in the early 1980s, as soon as the act came into effect. Most of the issues have been significantly reviewed, as I've said before.
There are some new issues. Duty to document is new. I'm certainly the first commissioner who is fully supporting an order-making model, and there are complex issues relating to coverage, which some of the honourable members of the committee have asked about. Those are complex. The full spectrum of areas that are excluded in schedule II of the act includes some 66 pieces of legislation. Those areas, in my view, would need more time, but decisions about advice and recommendations, decisions about cabinet confidences, decisions about an order-making model, decisions about timeliness can all be made in a legislative package fairly quickly because they have been studied many times.