The ultimate reason is to try to be more efficient in dealing with non-compliance and have the opportunity and the possibility to impose sanctions that are proportionate to the offence. For someone who's late and consistently late, if I impose the penalty, chances are that they'll never be late again. Now what I do is tell them not to be late. If they're late again, I send them a letter, and there are no consequences.
Right now, if I choose to investigate someone who's constantly late, if I have reason to believe that they're late and therefore they've committed an offence, I need to send that to the RCMP. Not all offences under the Lobbying Act are created equal but, unfortunately right now, they're all treated the same, and it's difficult to manage. I think it would help efficiency and it would help compliance, because I would be able to make those things public faster.
