Thank you, Chair.
For the past probably six or seven years, the issue of redaction and whether it's necessary or not and the compliance issue have certainly been in the forefront for a lot of people, especially in the realms of journalism, for commercial reasons, and so on and so forth.
Both of you could weigh in on this subject, but Mr. Surtees, I'm going to go to you, because obviously the sensitivity in your department is that much higher, and as was pointed out by Ms. Empey, people's lives are at stake here. What happens when you have an issue with redaction of your department? If they redact something, do you have the right to say to them, “I don't think you're complying with the act here”? Do you have that conversation with them? If there is that—not so much by a client, by the person asking, but by the department itself, and you have a disagreement, do you have that power and ability? Or, if the Department of National Defence says, “We're sorry but that cannot go into documents”, do you then take that to the client?