No, I really wanted you to comment specifically on whether SCISA did strike the right balance between the objectives you have for your agency and protecting privacy.
If I may shift a little, perhaps Ms. Sheppard might be the best one to comment on this. I heard more than one presenter repeat an identified concern about individuals who would be reluctant to make a disclosure for fear of violation of privacy law, whether founded or unfounded.
We as a committee, in studying the Privacy Act, have heard from many witnesses about the demands people have for privacy, and yet a failure to communicate important information that results in a crime, perhaps a horrific or catastrophic crime, is of equal concern to Canadians when something like this has happened. Nobody wants ever again to have a commission that looks into how agencies fail to communicate with each other to prevent a crime.
Does SCISA do enough to allay individual concerns that people have over violating privacy law to do their job correctly?