I think what you are asking for is difficult to implement given Scouts Canada's privacy policy (
BP&P 12000). How can National demonstrate compliance with their privacy policy with all sorts of electronic copies of personal information sitting on scouter hard drives? Sure it's going on today but at least National can claim that they are "doing their best". Also, there's probably an agenda around getting the data into MMS where it is visible to all levels of Scouts Canada, and more readily managed (in theory

).
Your average scouters can't be expected to know much about how to safely store and transmit personal information. I am sure you are encrypting any such files that might exist on your hard drive, and passing them around using
PKI or some other secure means that guarantee that your intended recipient is the only one who can open the files, but what about the thousands of others who have no idea what I am talking about.
In order to implement what you are asking for, I think Scouts Canada has to rethink the way we deal with records from the ground up. Why do we collect all this paper, reproduce it for every event or outing and submit dozens of copies of it over the year for archive, when it should be collected once, stored electronically, and aggregated as needed to produce a record of the event? Why are we slaying so many trees?
In my copious free time

, I am working on a web-based event registration system that may help reduce the administrative overload around scouting. The trick is balancing privacy with ease of use.
(Hmmm, that sounds like a good project for a virtual Rover Crew...)