I think the best example was some of the records that were at issue in the Supreme Court of Canada decision in what is referred to often as “the Prime Minister's agenda”. We refer to this case as the “Prime Minister's agenda”, but there were other types of records in that case that have real importance to Canadians. These were minutes that were taken of meetings between the minister and the chief of staff and senior officials in the Department of National Defence. The only records of those meetings were actually notes of exempt staff, and the court decided on the current test that these records would not be subject to access to information.
In my view, seriously, these were highly important records of decisions in a time of preparation for war. They could have been exempted under a national security exemption, but they should have been subject to the act.
That was a really clear example, and it's something that is documented.