As I mentioned earlier, the goal is not for investigations to be mandatory in all cases. Still, the commission must have reasonable grounds to believe that a miscarriage of justice may have occurred, so it must have received a minimum amount of information to enable it to conduct an investigation.
As soon as there are reasonable grounds to believe that a miscarriage of justice may have occurred, I think the logic of the current reform should lead to a mandatory investigation. We want to prevent certain cases of miscarriage of justice from going unreported and uncorrected. As long as there are reasonable grounds, I think compulsory investigation goes without saying.
As far as making the process more cumbersome by using this commission, I don't think it will be very significant. As I mentioned earlier, there are cases where investigations are very straightforward. Having read investigation reports published under the current process, I can say that there are cases where investigations are more complex.
I think this answers your question.