We had a great deal of discussion about the issue, as you can well imagine. It started at the outset with the commissioner complaining about the inordinate delays, of sometimes two, three, and four years, before the information was released—an incredible portion. All the details of what they were are in our report, so I don't want to go into them now, but the standard and times involved were so unacceptable that we couldn't let them remain.
We were the ones who raised, with the commissioner, an order-making model, and we were inclined to go to that model, but the commissioner kept speaking against it and expressing his view that the ombudsman model worked better. He argued that the order-making model would introduce even longer delays than were already being experienced because they would have to do a detailed assessment and write a supporting decision that would stand up to legal scrutiny on appeal of any such order. He believed it would introduce even longer delays because of the hearing processes, and so on. That made some sense, at least to me, having experience with delays in courts with hearings and processes.
We wanted to find a procedure that would work best. By the end of the hearing, there had been an overwhelming number of complaints about delays and so on. As a result of the discussions, it started to come to light what was driving some of the inherent delays, and the commissioner came around and said, “Well, we could live with an order-making model. It may work all right, but we think the ombudsman model is best for Newfoundland and Labrador.”
When we then did the detailed assessment of what was driving it—and all that information is in the report—it was clear that the commissioner's office was the cause of 90% of the delay. The procedures and the approach being taken weren't greatly different from what they were in most other provinces.
So the delay was just inordinate. We worked on a system that would speed it up, and the hybrid model is what we produced.
When the commissioner made his recommendations, we had very strict time limits placed on the time frame. There is provision for expansion, but it's very rigidly controlled. When the recommendation of the commissioner is made, if it's unacceptable to the public body, the public body has two choices: follow the recommendation and release it if it requires release, or apply to the court right away, within 10 days, for an order that you would not be required to release it.
As a result, the burden shifts to the public body, not to the requester to provide it. That's effectively making it an order, but it doesn't place the commissioner in the position where he or his office feels they have to go through these processes of hearings and to write this learned, extensive “court of appeal” type of judgment on the issue that takes all of this time, and then have the appeal of it go to a court, which hears the issue de novo, all over again.
One of the witnesses said to us, “We can understand having these rights, but why do you have two complete hearings?” And that made a lot of sense. So it was to avoid these problems, and this is where we see there would be delays in an order-making type of oversight system. You would not avoid the delays.
That was my point of view on it.
Doug, you may have something you want to add to that.