—in Gatineau Park, outside Montreal, and so forth. Those documents were disclosed under the Access to Information Act. That information, although it related to national security, could not meet an injury test for secrecy given its age and given the content in today's environment. However, it does relate to national security, and if this provision were in force today, that information would never be disclosed.
In fact, all of our national security apparatus would go beyond public scrutiny through transparency. If this were to pass, they would not have to meet injury tests, exercise discretion, or meet a public interest override. That is secrecy that has never existed in the 23 years that the act has been in force, and no one, to my knowledge, has ever asked for it.