I'll start by saying we're not asking for order-making powers at this time. I'm not opposed in principle to order-making powers. At the end of the day I think we can get to the same place differently in a way that would satisfy all concerns and without creating certain risks potentially. Why order-making powers? Madame Legault and I agree on many things, and we're not that far apart. I think she testified—and that is the situation with us as well—that when there are complaints either to her office, or to my office, government departments ultimately agree to act in the way we recommend them to act.
Order-making powers are not empirically required to change the way that government departments respond to our complaints, because ultimately they do. The issue is more the time it takes for government to reach that stage. Part of her argument, and I agree with her, is that currently the process is quite long. I said that in my remarks as well. There is an exchange of correspondence with government departments that sometimes takes two, three, or four iterations before we get to the right place. That may be in part because all we can do is to recommend, and there is no sanction for government not to act promptly in responding to our investigations.
An order-making power would create the right incentive for departments to act promptly and respond to our requests, but I think the Newfoundland model that I'm suggesting to you gets to the same place by amending legislation. I would continue to make recommendations and not orders, but according to the Newfoundland model these recommendations have to be complied with by government, unless they take the matter to court and challenge the recommendations made.
We get to the same place, just to finish on the question of the potential risks of an order-making power. Over the years there has been much discussion around the fact that order-making powers mean a more formal process. That certainly has the potential to be costlier, to involve more in terms of procedural rights, and so on. There's the potential for that, and that's one factor.
Another factor is that if there are order-making powers in a body that also has a responsibility, which I'm recommending here, to promote privacy rights, can you have in the same place a body that promotes privacy and the same body adjudicating impartially on the rights of Canadians vis-à-vis a government institution? I'm not saying it's incompatible. It's possible perhaps in terms of structure to build Chinese walls and to make these distinctions.