They have a complaint form that you can fill out.
I think our suggestion is that it's just good governance, good policy, to ensure that if you have extensive powers given to an organization, there is a way in which the regime self-corrects. You have oversight mechanisms. You can indeed have a body—it does not need to be a new body, it could be an expansion—that on occasion will draw attention to a failure to obey procedures. It's helpful to have oversight. It's helpful for people to think that they've been treated fairly and that the process is fair and reasonable, is not from the inside, and has some external validation.
We have crossed that bridge on pretty much all security and policing in Canada, and this is a holdout. There's no reason for it. We should just do it because that's good governance. It's essential. It helps the agency itself and it helps people to have more confidence in it.