At this point we've made a number of improvements, as I mentioned before, related to our process. We have seen some positive outcomes as a result of the improvements we have made. Some of our improvements are related to processing efficiency where we found deficiencies in the intake of information. We also have some other processing improvements, such as the batching we mentioned, which allows us to be able to more effectively handle the complaint volumes.
We also have improvements in adjudication where we've come forward with shortened decisions. We've reduced the time to issue an adjudication decision from 144 days to 40 days in total, so we do have some progress.
We also have some usability efficiencies going forward. We are trying to be increasingly transparent on our case status updates. We have put information online to help passengers understand where they are in our process in terms of the backlog in total and also to understand our process and where they're at, to help them navigate.
We're also working at posting soon the number of complaints or the volume of complaints per 100 flights for each airline to provide further information on the performance of the air industry.
We've undertaken and we've kicked off a more detailed review of our processes. This is going to be looking at not only how to improve our processes, but also the opportunities that elements like automation could provide us—particularly in the early parts of our process—so that we could, for example, automate some of the review of complaints to be able to find further efficiencies and allocate our resources towards the more complex part of our processes.
Because the volumes have increased so substantially, we need to really move to an operational organization. One that used to resolve 1,000 complaints is now resolving 30,000 complaints, so we do require a reset to do that.