One of the beautiful parts about our access to information and privacy legislation is that we don't share that information. While I have data to tell me that, even I don't know the names of the requesters, and I'm very comfortable with that.
Somebody like David Neilson is aware of those names, and he actually interacts at times with those requesters as they're trying to figure out the best way to respond, but he doesn't share that information with me, and there's no reason for us to know.
We do publish, I believe in our annual report, the percentage of requests that come from media, from individuals and from people who wish not to identify. I think that, increasingly, people don't identify, so we can't really give you accurate data on that.
