


Forrest Remick is a Senior Nuclear Safety Consultant to Talisman. He completed a five-year term as a Commissioner of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) on June 30, 1994 and is now a private consultant to various government, industry and university clients. When appointed to the Commission by President Bush, Dr. Remick was Associate Vice President for Research and Professor of Nuclear Engineering at The Pennsylvania State University. He was also serving as Chairman of the NRC's independent statutory Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards. During his tenure as a Commissioner of the NRC, the relicensing rule was written and adopted. Dr. Remick was intimately involved in the development of the rule and was instrumental in resolving differences between the NRC staff and the nuclear power industry. At his request, a series of meetings were held between the staff and representatives of the industry to rewrite certain provisions in the final rule to make it acceptable to both parties. Dr. Remick also served in a number of other capacities in the nuclear energy field including: consultant to the Argonne and Hanford Laboratories of DOE; consultant reactor operator license examiner for the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and the NRC; consultant to the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO); Charter Member of the National Nuclear Accrediting Board of the National Nuclear Training Academy; Director of the NRC's Office of Policy Evaluation; Administrative Judge with the AEC's and NRC's Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel; and Chief of the Training Section of the International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA) Department of Technical Assistance in Vienna Austria. His association with the NRC and its predecessor organization, the AEC, spanned more than 25 years. Dr. Remick was a licensed Reactor Operator and received the fourth Senior Reactor Operator's license issued by the AEC. He was named a 1993 outstanding Alumnus of the College of Engineering by The Pennsylvania State University, and, in 1995, received the Thomas P. Hamrick Memorial Award for his contributions to the training of nuclear facility personnel.