Thank you very much. That's an excellent question.
As I said earlier, the new law came into force on June 1, 2015, so it's relatively young. Even though there was 100% buy-in, 100% acceptance by the government of the new act, certain things had to be done to ensure that the results that the act envisages come to fruition. One of these was to make the amendments that had to be brought to the Management of Information Act.
We said a little earlier that this is a work-in-progress. My office has been in consultation with the Office of the Chief Information Officer, and we understand that the work is moving forward. Once the draft is complete, it will contribute significantly to the open government concept that has been recently adopted by the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador and hopefully will facilitate the release of more information, a lot of it proactively rather than as the result of an access to information request.
Of course, things are moving a bit slower than we'd anticipated, because as you may or may not know, the act came into force on June 1, 2015, and a number of months after that there was political interest in getting ready for an election, which occurred on November 30, 2015, which led into Christmas. The new government was sworn in, I think, around the middle of December.
Another aspect of what is going on in this province is that the priority for this government has been preparing for the budget process, which was announced last week. I will say that it has not been the most popular budget that this province has ever seen.
All of this has been a preoccupation of the government. I think we're a little bit behind where we'd like to be in terms of the Office of the Chief Information Officer's moving that duty-to-document situation forward. There will be more on this in the near future, we hope.
Sean, do you have any comments?