I think that's an important point. When I talk about privacy as an accelerator of the trust Canadians have in their institutions, I mean that. It's important that Canadians are reassured about the processes that exist and about their institutions and what their institutions are doing.
In this case, I think Canadians will see that the RCMP is providing responses to Parliament, will be appearing and will be sharing information and answering questions by this committee. They will be playing a fundamental role in obtaining information and providing advice to the House in its report. I think this is a strong functioning system.
What I am advocating for is to see even more of that in the context of privacy impact assessments at the front end. I think that would even further generate some of this trust and would perhaps allay concerns that may arise—perhaps needlessly—when something becomes public in the media and creates some doubts. At the end of the day, they may be unwarranted, whereas if this had been looked at earlier on, perhaps there would have been a way of allaying doubts even earlier.