
Who's going to build it? Who's going to make it? This is a challenge that I'm hearing from all my employers.
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Who's going to build it? Who's going to make it? This is a challenge that I'm hearing from all my employers.

Does anybody else just want to say something about this youth employment and kind of the opportunity to better connect young people either to school or work with WIOA.

I think the term that I've heard my colleague Bobby Scott use is Opportunity Youth, which I like.

Not everybody can access a 4-year degree or even a 2-year degree. But we also know that by 2031, more than 70 percent of jobs will require some form of post-secondary education or training beyond high school.

Not everybody can access a 4-year degree or even a 2-year degree. But we also know that by 2031, more than 70 percent of jobs will require some form of post-secondary education or training beyond high school.

I really celebrate work that we've done in the last couple years to do an Infrastructure bill.

Does anybody else just want to say something about this youth employment and kind of the opportunity to better connect young people either to school or work with WIOA.

Who's going to build it? Who's going to make it? This is a challenge that I'm hearing from all my employers.

I think the term that I've heard my colleague Bobby Scott use is Opportunity Youth, which I like.

That's why I have long been a champion of expanding Pell Grant to include high quality short-term education and training programs.

My innate sense of fairness makes me add an addendum to the comment that I last made about insurance rates not being purely actuarial in nature.

One of the things about your testimony that's important is, you know, I'm a senior citizen now.

My legal career, the highlight of it was a lawsuit that I brought against the Nationwide Insurance Company for redlining minority neighborhoods all of the United States in 1998.

One of the things about your testimony that's important is, you know, I'm a senior citizen now.

If I could also respond to Mr. Mulready on the point about regulators sort of looking at and reshaping agencies is not something that we need to look at.

My innate sense of fairness makes me add an addendum to the comment that I last made about insurance rates not being purely actuarial in nature.

I think we often assume that rates charged homeowners by homeowners insurance is based upon some rational algorithm using actuarial data, but that is not always true.

My legal career, the highlight of it was a lawsuit that I brought against the Nationwide Insurance Company for redlining minority neighborhoods all of the United States in 1998.