Obviously not, and these issues tend to percolate up the closer and closer we get to census time. They reach a crescendo when the census takers start knocking on doors and doing their follow-ups.
The fines and/or imprisonment are in the legislation. They're found in the Statistics Act, and that is part of the repertoire of inducements and/or threats that are used to get people to fill out the form. So we think that's inappropriate. We think that's government going too far in the pursuit of more and more data.
We acknowledge that data is important for making decisions, but we think we should be searching for a middle way of protecting citizens from the overbearing nature of the state when it comes to these things, and at the same time obtaining usable data that serves the purpose for which the survey is intended. That's the balanced approach we're taking.