Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Mr. LaPointe, in your presentation, you said that government action could sometimes lead people to be distrustful or even cynical about political involvement, because they don't really have the relevant information to look at and evaluate.
I don't know if you saw it, but today in Le Devoir there's an article by journalist Émilie Bergeron, which reports that as a result of an access to information request, she happened to read in a Treasury Board document that the access to information issue was not a priority. So a Treasury Board document states clearly that for public servants, access to information is not a priority.
On the basis of your experience, and Mr. Wernick's, is this state of affairs widespread in the federal government? Is this idea that access to information is not a priority common to all the departments?