Yes. The privacy parts were the poor cousins of the existing legislation. People had relatively few rights of recourse to the commissioner, so we tidied that up.
However, our work in Newfoundland was not really so much about personal information. There are large parts about personal information. A lot of the population's concerns about personal information were in reaction to health information; there had been some controversies about use of personal information. Newfoundland has a very new, modern, and contemporary public health information act, so it's a different context from this.