I will say the triple-delete investigation—we call it a scandal here in B.C.—resulted in a significant number of recommendations for government and a catalyst for change, so there has been some good coming out of that investigation. On the specific circumstances around the individual, you are correct in that he perjured himself in his testimony given to my former colleague Elizabeth Denham, the then privacy commissioner, and he was charged under the act. That was the first circumstance where that had occurred.
We have recommended that the fines to individuals be increased to a substantial level, and the reason for that recommendation is evident in some of the more recent, as the media calls them, snooping incidents into personal health records of individuals, where employees of health authorities who have access to patient information, but no need or business need to access specific patient files, go in and snoop. We believe there are significant deterrents required in order to prevent the amount of snooping that we see going on, not only in B.C. but across the country.