Sure. From the perspective of a local distribution company, matters of confidentiality arise, first and foremost, when customer information is involved. I can give you a specific example that we've been addressing with Statistics Canada for several months. The nature of the request was such that there didn't seem to be an understanding of the sensitive, confidential nature of the information they were requesting. It was the names of specific businesses, their locations, their individual consumption, and their points of contact. We tripped up over that significantly, and that's continuing.
Companies like ours understand that there's a public interest in sharing our consumption and delivery information at an aggregate level; there's no quibbling about that. We get hung up with customer information. It seemed like, in this and other instances, that Statistics Canada was not sensitive enough or attuned to that particular principle and prerogative. It would be helpful if we were engaging with folks from federal agencies who already had that type of understanding. Perhaps that comes with a better expertise in the industry and how it operates.
That's one example for your consideration.