Thank you very much for the question.
I will repeat what earlier witnesses have said and I'm in agreement with them. I think the clause as written is overly broad. I think it corrects something that, in fact as this committee heard from the bankers, does not actually need correction. The bankers who appeared in front of the committee were quite happy with the investigative body model that they have. They have well-reputed investigative bodies to research fraud and those issues that are concerning to all Canadians in terms of identity theft.
I think other witnesses have also noted that to just look at what's happening in British Columbia and Alberta in terms of similar provisions is misleading because they don't deal with the same type of organizations, namely the big telecommunication and Internet service providers that fall squarely under the jurisdiction of PIPEDA. That's why I recommended that the committee should not tamper with it. It should leave the existing model that exists in PIPEDA as it is and not proceed with these amendments.
To address your other point, certainly the spirit of Spencer is that Canadians have expectations of privacy in all of this information. As somebody who researches privacy, to see a bill come forward with many good provisions about privacy but also many exceptions that allow people to do things without consent and without agreement, to me that is problematic when we got a signal this summer from the Supreme Court that everybody has reasonable expectations of privacy in that kind of information.