Thank you, once again, to our witnesses for being here today. It's great to see you guys again. I know Jonathon and I had a chance to spend some time in Windsor this summer.
I guess the question I have—and I've heard this from all the witnesses this morning—is about how difficult it is to access any kind of duty relief or duty deferral, whatever you want to call it.
I need to understand. When we talked in the summer, the point was, “Listen. Two to three months is all we can handle—four months maximum—if this doesn't get solved.” In other words, if we don't get a deal, which would include the removal of tariffs on steel and aluminum, it's a four- to six-month-...if we qualify. How on earth are we going to survive?
We're now into month four. I would just like your thoughts. I think we're at a critical point. You guys were stressed when I talked to you in the summertime when we hadn't had this for two or three months.
Talk to us about how long we can sustain this. I'm hearing people say that they're going to move plants to the States if they can. I realize that a guy who has 20 employees can't, but somebody who has 50 million and above maybe can. Where are your actual people in your organizations?
If they're a supplier, that stuff can be done in the States, and that may be a possibility because they're trying to keep their supply chain intact as cheaply as possible for these OEMs, etc.