Some of the concerns that were raised, and there have been lots of comments made by the OPC, including recently to this committee, not necessarily looking back to Bill C-11 but anticipating, in terms of the new iteration, what some of those elements should be. The first one being a rights-based framework, so making sure this is a regime that is not exclusively based on consent and that it recognizes privacy as a fundamental right. Dealing with de-identified information is very important, and ensuring there are prohibitions on reidentification, as well as calibrating to make sure it doesn't fall outside of the law. Dealing with automated decisions and artificial intelligence, all of these new things that weren't present.
There were some discussions on Bill C-11 in terms of whether you needed a tribunal to review the commissioner's decisions in terms of penalties. The OPC took the position that it should not be and that it should be a final decision of the OPC, subject to a judicial review. This is going to be important to look at. I share the concerns in terms of delays, if you add layers of review that just make it longer before you have a final resolution. I share the concerns about the federal commissioner having perhaps less authority than provincial counterparts, but there were some other options that were raised in this discussion as to whether there could then be a direct appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal or a specialized tribunal.
The key point is to ensure that the OPC is able to operate within that regime effectively. There have been discussions in terms of resources. There's a concern that was raised in terms of the new powers or responsibilities for the commissioner to verify codes of practice. The commissioner, I think rightly, raised the fact that, if that's the case, there may need to be some discretion in terms of where you focus that work because, otherwise, it can very quickly take a lot of your resources.
This is something that I did at the Human Rights Commission. We adopted a public interest strategic litigation approach, where we would focus our key resources on the key cases that would have the biggest impact for Canadians, and that was very successful.