Thank you, Chair.
Precisely, Dave, you're dead on. But it goes right to the crux of the simplicity of my starting point. We already have a solution. It is in place. It has been in place and it is legislated. It is in O'Brien and Bosc on page 1071:
A document submitted to a committee becomes the property of the committee and forms part of the committee's records. Each committee must decide whether such documents will be made public or kept confidential.
We just make a decision; it doesn't matter what the decision is, but the committee makes a decision. If it's kept confidential because the numbers on the committee dictate, it's kept confidential. If the committee numbers dictate that it's let out, then it's let out. That is the way it should be going forward, and that is the way, regrettably, it should have been in the past. That's the whole point of this argument today.
If we're going forward, then we simply have to say we have to have a level of control. Otherwise, we are going to have a continuation of what we have now. If the information comes into the committee, the committee decides, and so be it.