That's the way the law works. I just want to make sure that we're clear on what the decision was. The decision was to reject the application before the court. Sorry, I sometimes hark back to my law school days.
Let me just get to the nub of the issue, though, for the member, and I take that seriously.
I do encourage this committee to go through a walk-through demo with my officials of the online database, because it is so usable for yourselves as parliamentarians, and for Canadians. There's a whole treasure trove of information going three years back, and for the reports on plans and priorities three years ahead with our projections. You can cross-reference by program, by year, by activity, by department. It's all there. I really do believe that it will be a very useful tool for citizens and parliamentarians to understand this.
Let's face it. Let's be honest with one another. The budget is a very large, very complex document of a very large and very complex organization. No revelation there. But we have to catch up and we are starting to catch up with that complexity, to allow individual human beings, without the big brain of Bill Matthews sitting beside them, to understand what is being done. I do think this will be very helpful. I think it answers a lot of the concerns you just expressed about access to budgetary information, and I agree with you: it is necessary for parliamentarians to do their jobs. I really encourage this committee to do the sit-down demo—formally or informally; it’s your call—with the officials. I think it will be very helpful and will help animate your future deliberations.