I will stay within five minutes.
As the Information Commissioner noted previously, the records held by the Privy Council Office are unique and complex. Given the nature of our mandate, documents in our care are often sensitive, and my colleague Nabih Eldebs is here to address some of the national security complexities that may apply to historical documents.
With regard to PCO's access to information performance, our active complaint inventory has been steady over the last few years, fluctuating between 200 and 250 active complaints as new ones are received and others are resolved. We are facing spikes in the volume of requests. We have also observed an increase in the size of requests, and our requests have almost doubled over the last five years. Currently, over 20% of PCO's active files are 1,000 pages or more, with a total of over two million pages in active requests that we must review.
We share the Information Commissioner's desire to resolve PCO's backlog of requests and complaints. Dealing with complaints and orders requires additional resources, which then reduces our capacity to respond to active files, leading to more complaints. We want to break this cycle.
As has been noted, PCO is the custodian of a high volume of historical intelligence files, and many of our active complaints relate to these files. PCO shares the concerns of the Information Commissioner related to historical records held by PCO and is committed to working with Library and Archives Canada to transfer documents on an accelerated basis.
As a first step, by December 31, 2026, PCO will transfer its historical intelligence records dated prior to 1975 to LAC. PCO will also work to proactively release records from 1976 onward in order to match the practices of Five Eyes countries that proactively release records after a defined period.
We are also taking steps to proactively address our own ATIP challenges. As part of our duty to assist under the Access to Information Act, we work with requesters to exclude records that are not of value to them. This allows more targeted responses in a shorter period of time.
Aligned with advice from the Information Commissioner, PCO makes every effort to limit consultations only to those that are necessary. Where possible, we send other departments a notification of release with a shortened deadline, allowing them to raise concerns.
We are making every effort to find efficiencies and implement software improvements. As such, we are following Public Services and Procurement Canada and Treasury Board Secretariat's enterprise solution for new access to information request-processing software. This software is expected to reduce administrative burdens on the team with flexibilities, including faster importing of records and auto-indexing, which will allow us to better search.
Finally, we have ensured that our access to information team has not been impacted by the recent expenditure review and are taking steps to reallocate additional internal resources to this team to deal with the backlog.
We are firmly committed to ensuring that Canadians have access to government information and recognize the essential role that access plays in a healthy democracy. We're constantly working to improve it.
We look forward to elaborating on some of these elements and responding to all of your questions.