Yes, but I have just a quick question here. A spitball kind of question just came to me. I don't want to give the impression that I think we should institute a new bureaucracy of e-police out there, because there is a certain trust factor for MPs as well as their staff, under which all of us have to work in this environment, and I appreciate that.
From time to time, I'm sure, certain committees will be producing highly confidential documents. It is one thing to put some procedures and protocols in place to perhaps--at least I hope--prevent those documents from being forwarded or released to people who shouldn't see them, but that doesn't really stop, if someone wanted to.... Madame DeBellefeuille said that if people want to cheat, if they want to break the law, they'll always find a way.
One way, obviously, is by examining a document closely enough, without physically forwarding it either in hard copy or electronically, and then verbally informing someone of what it contained. Currently, I understand, there is really no way to stop that from happening.
Would there be a need--or perhaps would there be the capability within the House--if there were highly sensitive documents, to develop a secure site where the documents could be sent? Then, for anyone who wanted to examine the documents, their name and the time at which they examined those documents would be registered. That may be complete overkill. I'm the first to admit it may be out of there. But is that something that could happen?