So far in 2024—we're almost at the end of the year—we have received 304 disclosures, which can include multiple allegations, each of which has to be investigated, and we have so far received 85 reprisal complaints.
Even though it's not in our act, we do offer a reconsideration of cases if people can bring forward new evidence or if they have legitimate questions to challenge a decision. There have been seven of those in disclosures and four in reprisals.
We've opened four conciliations, because, particularly with reprisals, if we can find a way forward that suits the complainant, that's always preferable to an imposed solution that has to go to tribunal. We've opened four conciliations—those are extremely time-consuming and resource-consuming—two of which have been completed.
We've launched this year 18 investigations in disclosure and 28 in reprisal over and above the ones that lingered from the previous year; that's just what we launched this year.
There are also submissions completed after analysis. In other words, the submissions were analyzed, and we found that either they were out of jurisdiction or that, for whatever reason, they did not meet the criteria as set out under the act. Of the submissions completed after case analysis, 221 were for disclosure and 57 were for reprisal. We've thus far completed 11 investigations this year in disclosures and seven in reprisals, and we've issued two case reports.