It hasn't been looked at, and I agree that Citizenship and Immigration is one of the departments that has received the most requests and one that is the most complained against. It's one of the 10 most complained-against departments. No doubt if we were to open it up to the public—and we are, in fact, a country that receives immigrants—perhaps there will be an appetite for information in certain sectors if and when we open it up to a universal right of access.
That's what I am saying. I have no data to suggest how many requests we would be receiving—20,000, 50,000, or 90,000. I think somebody else ought to look at this and quantify the workload associated with that.
However, before we do any of that, we have to get our own system right. If it is a quasi-constitutional right that we give to Canadians, those Canadians have a right to anticipate receiving an answer in an appropriate amount of time. At the moment it's not taking place. Before throwing the doors open to the world, let's just make sure we clean up our own act, and this I suggest would take a couple of years before we get there, with the direction and advice of this particular committee.