Mr. Chair, I'm happy to report that our recruiting modernization team is making good progress. It is advancing on three lines of effort. The first is on attraction, getting more applicants in the door to sign up. The good news is that I was just informed last week that our applicant numbers are above historic norms—and that's putting the new permanent-resident policy aside. There is some light that showing. The challenge now is to convert those applications to enrolment. That's the first one.
The second line of effort is to streamline the recruiting process. This means getting a digital online portal to ease the process. It means putting our Canadian Armed Forces aptitude test, unproctored, online and addressing a number of the systemic barriers that are in there, such as the security clearance.
The third one, the third line of effort, is the medical requirements. Currently, 70% of our applicants require a second level of medical review. It speaks to the medical challenges in our society, the mental health, the medication, etc. Many times when we ask them to go back, we need notes from their family doctors or specialists. In our society, as you're well aware, there's a shortage of those types of clinicians, so we're looking at innovative ways to deal with that challenge, as well.
At the same time, our common—