I'd be happy to.
There are a number of pockets where programming activity has changed quite dramatically. If you'll permit, I'll just cover a few of them.
One of them is the wage earner protection program, which is a program we haven't covered yet tonight. It provides compensation to workers who were terminated as a result of being associated with a company that has gone bankrupt or into receivership. While the number of bankruptcies associated with this program are actually down slightly from the previous year, the number of individual applications have gone up. That means more large companies have gone into bankruptcy or into receivership.
[Technical difficulty—Editor] more activity there than we normally would. That particular program normally has a statutory cap of about $49 million, but we [Technical difficulty—Editor] close to $30 million compensating former employees in that capacity. We would project forward that we're likely to exceed that statutory cap, which is fine. If you meet the requirements, you get the money. There's no challenge for the individuals, but that program has grown quite a bit.
Another program is a Government Employees Compensation Act program. There, our volumes have actually gone down. Because a number of employees are working at home outside of the workplace, in the first quarter of this fiscal year we only had about 30% of our typical volume for that same period. In our second quarter, we only had about 60%. There's been a precipitous drop—if I can call it that—in the first half of this year.
If I turn to labour standards, because of the initial adjustment period, we're only at about 92% of our monetary complaint capacity. We're not far off of what it was last year. There is a fair amount of work going on there.
In our occupational health and safety area, we've actually reduced the amount of proactive work we have done historically fairly significantly. Our reactive work is still sitting at about 80%. That's driven principally based on complaints. There's quite a bit of variation through the various programs as a result of that.
In employment equity, which I didn't cover—the fifth program—we would have actually seen a delay in people submitting their reports, but we're not concerned about that.
In our international area, there's still been a fair amount of work with our colleagues in the provinces—as the minister spoke of—and also internationally. Also, our federal mediation and conciliation service is still very busy assisting stakeholders in the employment context to resolve outstanding challenges within their context.
I think that's a fairly broad coverage.