Obviously you're referring to the task that I think Mr. Brown has been assigned, which is to come up with some type of governance structure.
I think we're dealing with multiple things when we deal with an organization such as a police force. Through the history of the country, which obviously comes out of the British tradition, the Attorney General function and the policing function are recognized as having a special status in law in terms of the independence that we expect to flow from them, and certainly in my more than 33 years in public safety issues, every minister I've dealt with has been cognizant of the need to maintain the integrity of that function.
That having been said, you can still have a number of structures in place that give the public the assurance it needs, because the reality is that public expectations have changed over the years and are very high today. The function we provide in terms of a public thing is that a complaint allows us to go in and look at it. Separate from that is an issue of governance. There may be things that don't fall within my mandate in terms of review, nor within Ms. Ebbs's mandate in terms of review, but those go to how the force is managed. There are decisions there that clearly would be of interest to a manager but would also be of interest to a minister. There's nothing wrong. Other police forces have boards of governance in place that people report up to. Municipal police forces go up to boards that are separate from the city council, and they have mixed memberships on them, so you can do things like that.
I would just point out, though, from my own experience, that it is a touchstone and hopefully remains a touchstone in Canada that politicians do recognize a distinction in terms of the independence of the police. That independence, though, goes to whom to investigate and when to investigate in respect of what. So it's not as if the police force is autonomous in all regards; it goes to the discharge of its function, which is an investigative function.