Thanks, Mr. Chair.
On this general recommendation toward greater availability of documentation and the requirement to document decision-making, I listened to Mr. Blaikie's first round of questions with interest and your own anecdote in particular about having to disclose your horse doodle and whatnot. The thought I had then was, how do you guard against...? If we all agree that anything you ever create, whether it's a sketch in your notebook that might contain your own doodles, or whatever you might commit to paper, ought fairly to be part of anybody's access to information, how do we protect against an absence of context when information is disclosed? How do we protect against the types of frivolous or fishing requests that people may be encouraged to make with the knowledge that you never know what you're going to get when you see somebody's notebook, and frivolous or vexatious requests may arise from that, and information disclosed will lack context and not be understood properly?