Right, and it would apply in this kind of scenario.
I'm sorry; I want to come back to the issue of other bodies, but this just reminds me, what is your interpretation of the difference between—now that I've sort of zeroed in on it—not the “must” versus “may” but the “seriously compromise an ongoing investigation” by any other person or entity versus “could have been adequately dealt with, or could more appropriately be dealt with, according to a procedure provided for under any Act of Parliament”?
It seems to me that in one sense, the NDP amendment does provide for less discretion insofar as the only case in which they may refuse to deal with it is if there is a concern about a serious compromise to another investigation, so there might be a case in which it's determined that it wouldn't seriously compromise another investigation but it would still be more appropriately dealt with at another body. The implication of the new language is that effectively the commission doesn't have the flexibility to refuse in that case; they have the flexibility to refuse only if there's a basis for believing that there would be a serious compromise to an ongoing investigation.
Is my understanding accurate, or am I missing something?