YEAH. LAURA, TO BE CLEAR, WE'RE NOT TALKING ABOUT THE REACTOR UNIT. THAT WAS INVOLVED IN THAT 1979 PARTIAL MELTDOWN. BUT INSTEAD, THERE HAS BEEN A LOT OF SPECULATION THAT THE OTHER REACTOR UNIT THERE, THE ONE THAT WAS SHUT OFF IN 2019 FOR ECONOMIC REASONS, COULD POTENTIALLY BE RESTARTED. SOME SAY THERE COULD BE A LOT OF BENEFITS. OTHERS SAY IT'S JUST NOT WORTH IT. OUR POSITION IS LET'S CLEAN THE MESS UP THAT YOU CREATED. 45 YEARS BEFORE YOU START CREATING MORE WASTE. COMMUNITY ACTIVISTS AND PEOPLE WHO LIVE NEAR THREE MILE ISLAND DURING THE 1979 ACCIDENT, RAISED ENVIRONMENTAL AND SAFETY CONCERNS WITH RESTARTING THE REACTOR UNIT THAT WAS SHUT DOWN IN 2019. ERIC EPSTEIN, FORMER CHAIRMAN OF THREE MILE ISLAND ALERT, SAYS HE DOES NOT WANT TO SEE HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF TAXPAYER DOLLARS GO TOWARD RESTARTING THE PLANT. IT'S NOT A BIG PLANT. IT'S 50 YEARS OLD. THERE ARE MORE EFFICIENT, PRODUCTIVE SOURCES OF ENERGY THAT ARE AVAILABLE RIGHT NOW. THERE'S NO NEED TO RESUSCITATE A ZOMBIE NUCLEAR PLANT. BUT OTHERS SEE THE POTENTIAL TO IMPROVE PENNSYLVANIA'S FOOTING IN TERMS OF ENERGY PRODUCTION AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY TO CREATE JOBS. OUR GRID IS NOT STABLE. OUR GRID, IF YOU TALK TO PJM, IS FIVE YEARS FROM GOING BACKWARD BECAUSE WE DON'T HAVE ENOUGH POWER. THINGS HAVE CHANGED DRAMATICALLY. I THINK THERE'S SO MUCH ENTHUSIASM AROUND THE PROSPECT OF TMI UNIT ONE REOPENING BECAUSE OF THE ECONOMIC IMPACT AND THE JOBS IMPACT. LOOK, WHEN IT CLOSED FIVE YEARS AGO, IT WAS DEVASTATING, RIGHT? WE LOST HUNDREDS OF GOOD PAYING JOBS. SO. STATE REPRESENTATIVE TOM MAHAFFEY SAYS THAT HE BELIEVES THERE COULD BE SOME UPCOMING LEGISLATIVE HEARINGS ON THE MATTER. CONSTELLATION ENERGY, WHICH OWNS THE POWER PLANT, HAS SAID THEY HAVE NOT MADE ANY FINAL DECISIONS AT THIS POINT ABOUT WHETHER OR NOT THEY'RE GOING TO RESTART THE REACTOR UNIT THERE. THEY NOTE THAT IT WOULD BE A PROCESS THAT WOULD TAKE YEARS, AND THERE ARE A LOT OF FINANCIAL AS WELL AS REGULATORY CONCERNS THAT WOULD HAVE TO BE ADDRESSED. IN