Sure. Right now, when an organization is the subject of a complaint, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner will commence and carry out an investigation. At the conclusion of that investigation, it will issue a report of findings. These are non-binding findings, and there are express rights in the statute right now for the complainant, the individual who launched the complaint, or the Privacy Commissioner to take that to Federal Court. There is no right for organizations to do the same. It doesn't exist.
There would be rights under administrative law to do so, but organizations don't have the express right to do so. It just doesn't exist in there. So in essence, the remedies at the Federal Court level for both the complainant and a privacy regulatory authority are what are set out in the act.