Sure. Last year, the Privacy Commissioner published 15 recommendations that were his top priorities or top changes that he wanted to see in the CPPA, and none of them requested the removal of the tribunal. He requested two things. One was with respect to the tribunal and one was with respect to his other enforcement powers.
With respect to the tribunal, what he said was that he would prefer the tribunal decisions be appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal rather than the Federal Court, which is currently the system. As we've said, it's not an appeal, it's a judicial review, so it's not quite the same thing. Skipping a step is not really going to make it faster, because it's not an appeal.
The second recommendation was about giving more flexibility with respect to compliance agreements. Specifically, he wanted to be able to enter into a compliance agreement at any point in time; he wanted financial consideration, so the equivalent of AMPS, to be part of the compliance agreement that he could conclude, and there are government amendments to that effect.