Thank you, Chair.
Just to go back a little to when we were talking about these workplace exposures, things that you have to deal with and trying to assess.... People are working every day, and they may not understand or be made aware of the toxicity of the things that they're working with. Then, time goes by and they have these longer-term side effects.
You mentioned that communication is very important, and that the conversation, the awareness, is consistently there, but beyond a long-term cancer risk there are so many different kinds of exposures. There's reproductive health. People might not directly attribute it to their workplaces, but they may see other things or try to look at family history—all of these things. What assessment is being done? What is the federal government doing to ensure that the communication is happening actively so that people and workers truly understand, in federal workplaces, that they are potentially in an exposed state, that they are exposed, I guess you could say?