Welcome to our witnesses.
Mr. Lesinski, you described the role that CNL can fill in the development of SMRs. It's my understanding that work by the skilled trades on-site is in the process of being outsourced. The sheet-metal workers, pipefitters, welders, etc., are being told to apply to companies who have won the requests for proposals or contracts.
Back in the decade of darkness, we saw this kind of workforce reduction in the nuclear industry. AECL ended up contracting and hiring back octogenarians, because it had shortsightedly discarded its institutional memory, and that was due to reductions in federal funding imposed by the government of the day.
Mr. Lesinski, you've been in the nuclear field for decades, and you are highly familiar with the added dimension of knowledge necessary to work on a nuclear licensed site. This involves specialized training and an entirely different culture. How will you be able to conduct the SMR construction for a prototype model if the people who can do the work have scattered to other jobs outside of CNL, and perhaps outside the region?