1 DR. HECKER: John, would you like to write anything on impacts and 



2 percentages we might accept, the level? 



3 DR. BUTMAN: Page is going to write something on number one here. 



4 DR. MILLER: I'd like to refer to your agenda. If you will go 



5 to--what you have done is jumped to the third day, which is tomorrow, 



6 what we were going to do tomorrow. 



7 During the final day of the workshop, the panel members are to 



8 meet, prepare written drafts of their conclusions, focusing on the 



9 workshop hypotheses discussed during the Roundtable Session and to 



10 summarize their comments developed on issues considered during the panel 



11 sessions. 



12 We have changed the agenda here, but that still does not relieve 



13 the responsibilities of accomplishing the end goal, which is to prepare 



14 this document, and that is what we are focusing on. I would strongly 



15 urge you to take your panel members, take the topics that you had 



16 outlined, assign responsibility for that material to be prepared and 



17 written, and get your drafts in. 



18 The rapporteurs are here to help you do the typing on that. They 



19 have been taking notes, but it is your responsibility to put this 



20 together and to come to some conclusions and recommendations, as to what 



21 are the problems as you've been discussing here, or the options. 



22 This is the way this is wired in. The narrative section will form 



23 a consolidated summary synthesis of the conclusions and recommendations 



24 of the scientific panel members. That is what we have been trying to 



25 do. 



26 In essence, you have collapsed some of tomorrow's session into 



27 today's by trying to-- 



28 DR. HECKER: But then to ask us to turn it around in an hour, I 



29 think is-- 



30 DR. MILLER: This was one of the dangers of doing this. 



31 DR. AURAND: That is also one of the dangers of accelerating the 



32 schedule. 



33 DR. MILLER: That's right. That's exactly right. 



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