Thank you very much, Madam Chair. It's nice to be back at the international trade committee after a brief hiatus.
What's interesting to me is that we did a study on softwood lumber when I was on this committee over a year ago. That updated a study from a few years before on softwood lumber, which updated a study from a few years before that on softwood lumber. Despite all of this, there's been zero progress on resolving the softwood lumber dispute. This has real consequences. It's had real consequences for workers—as you mentioned, Ms. Payne—and their families.
I'm wondering if you have any thoughts about what the benefit to workers would be if the dispute were resolved and the $9 billion in tariffs returned to companies, which could invest in the bold redevelopment strategy you just talked about.