 There's 66,000 households that are in this district. We're looking at about 95% destroyed. On an average day before the earthquake, it takes about three hours to get from Kathmandu to Sindupolchuk. It took us three hours and 20 minutes. That's because there were no massive trucks, no massive convoys that were clogging up the roads, which are very common that I see during relief efforts. People are flying into the airport and there's no more delays. People are getting in and they're getting out. On one hand, it's nice not to be delayed, but why aren't there delays? Where is the incoming traffic? Where is the incoming humanitarian commodities? These are people that are six weeks away from a monsoon and they're three months away from winter. And we need to start that preparation. We need to get everything going because if we miss this window of opportunity, it's not gonna be a humanitarian crisis. It's gonna be a migration crisis. Because if they don't have shelter and they don't have basic services, they can't stay where they are.