Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Welcome, Commissioner.
I want to read a quote from the former chief information officer of Canada, Dominic Rochon, who appeared before this committee on February 12. It's a bit of a long quote, but I think it's important to what I'm hoping to drive at. He said:
Looking purely at the data can be misleading. You heard my colleague who appeared for the Privy Council Office mention previously that there are a small number of individuals who could clog up the system. For example, at one point there was one individual who happened to reach out to 50 different departments and ask for every single [Microsoft] Teams chat document they had. You can imagine that one individual taking up that amount of resources across the system can be very challenging. There needs to be a way to look into that, perhaps using the Information Commissioner, so that we can prioritize and understand so that a small number of the population cannot necessarily monopolize the system.
He went on to say:
In terms of statistics, let me just give you the following. There are, as you may have heard, over 250 institutions that the law applies to. Of those 250...155 actually received a request and closed the request in 2024-25. Of those 155...91 responded at a rate of 90% or more. That's not a system that is completely failing. In fact, when I go abroad, I see that Canada is actually seen as a star performer when it comes to trust and transparency.
My question to you, Madam Commissioner, is this: Right now, the act contains no mechanism to address this problem. Bad-faith actors can weaponize digital tools to flood dozens of institutions at once, tying up public servants, burning through taxpayer dollars and crowding out legitimate requests from journalists, researchers and ordinary Canadians. Many provinces and territories already have safeguards in place, and so do many of our G7 peers, including the U.K., New Zealand and Australia. Canada is a bit of an outlier.
Is there anything we can be doing to ensure we have the basic tools at our disposal to address this type of situation?