Mr. Cooper, I just want to quickly revisit the state of record-keeping in Canada. I was going back over the transcripts from the Senate committee. Senator Runciman, in his Q and A session with members of the committee, noted that they've been talking about trying to get the Ontario system away from a paper-driven system for many years—he mentioned that we're going back 15 or 16 years—and that there has been very little progress and millions of dollars spent.
Leaving aside the intent of this bill, I'm wondering this. If we have what amounts to a patchwork quilt across Canada and don't have that up-to-date record system, do you think it might be better for the government to concentrate its resources on making sure that we have a nationwide, up-to-date computer system whereby a magistrate has information at his or her fingertips, so that you're not really putting the onus on the prosecutor anymore, because that information is available before the magistrate?
I'm wondering whether that might in your opinion be a way that we could solve this problem and also make sure that a tragedy such as what happened with Constable Wynn doesn't befall anyone else.