Okay. If you could get back to us with that and look at it, we'd be interested in hearing about that.
Thank you. You talked about the
Steelworkers AFL-CIO. As Mr. Cuzner did, I just happen to have a copy of the American printout from the Steelworkers AFL-CIO, and in it we have information on Canadian officials, because by law they have to report. I note that the salary and disbursements of the national director for Canada are listed.
Then of great interest to me on this page was the representational activities, which make up 33%. The political activities and lobbying make up 33%, and administration makes up 33%. What was of great interest to me was that when I looked at the rest of the high-level representatives, the Canadian entry was the highest in political activities and lobbying. I flipped through several pages, and political activity and lobbying activity of another vice-president is at 2%; another one is 5%, and another is 1%, but the Canadian has 33%, by far the highest. As a Canadian I'm entitled to know, and I want to know, how much unions are spending.
I'm a union member—I'm on a leave of absence—and I want to know where those dues are going when they concern political activities, so I would ask the commissioner again, why is it that Americans are allowed to have access to all this information, salaries included, and yet they don't have a privacy concern? Why do you think it's a privacy concern here and not there?