Oversight models have to be adapted to the reality of the jurisdiction. That's the first point I would make. At the federal level we are receiving close to 70,000 requests per year. We're dealing with national security issues. We're dealing with very complex Revenue Canada Agency issues, and RCMP investigations, and these are very, very complex files. Library and Archives files are oftentimes thousands and thousands of pages, as are CRA files, and we receive on average about 1800 complaints a year.
In Newfoundland they are dealing with 700 requests province-wide, and I believe the commissioner testified that he receives about a hundred complaints a year. It's a very small office, and when they testified before the panel, they highlighted the fact that they were too small to actually put in place an adjudicative model in their office.
There are the real distinctions between the two models. The Newfoundland model remains an ombudsman's model with recommendations. It remains such. If there is an appeal to the court, it is a de novo process, exactly what I am suggesting we need to avoid in the federal context. That's a key distinction.
The other key problem that I see in terms of that particular model in Newfoundland, in my understanding, is that they make recommendations, and the institution must abide by the recommendations. If they don't want to abide by the recommendations, then they have to apply to court. It's a de novo process.
That could work very well if I'm dealing with a simple case but if I'm dealing with thousands of pages of record and there are multiple recommendations for disclosure in there, which is oftentimes what we have at the federal level, I do not anticipate that I would have full agreement on all of the recommendations for disclosure on the file. I would see that leading to a lot more cases going to court on the Newfoundland model, imported if you wish, in the federal context.
Now my colleague the Privacy Commissioner testified that he favours a Newfoundland model under the Privacy Act, and that's his position on that. I really do not believe that the situation is the same under the access to information regime. Again, you have to look at the types of cases. Under the Privacy Act, people request their own personal information located within government institutions. It is not the same thing as people asking for the dealings of National Defence in relation to Afghan detainees. It is not the same as looking at the amount of money spent on the Saudi arms deals or the considerations around that. They're not the same files, so I stand very firmly on my recommendation on that.