 Looked out here a couple years ago, almost two years ago, thinking, you know, living out in the country, clean air, and nobody ever told us when we purchased the home in Tumlin Creek that they were having a biomass power plant, I never even heard anything about it. I was just astounded whenever I learned of the practices of this plant specifically since it's just a mile away, not to mention the noise. There's nothing like Christmas Eve with the sound of a jet engine in your backyard. I am between two of these plants. There's one in Franklin County and there's one in Madison County, and just because I don't live here doesn't mean the air doesn't travel, and that's what I think people shouldn't realize is pollution coming out here, pollution coming out in Franklin County, it's going to Athens, it's coming into Jackson County, it's going to go everywhere. Protecting the ground where I grow a garden, the water that we drink. I do believe that the smoke from the creosote railroad ties is affecting my breathing. I have asthma, I live with my elderly parents and they're not breathing good. This thing uses a million gallons of water a day, a day. I was diagnosed with a rare and incurable pulmonary disease towards the latter part of 2019 after a long biopsy, and so I now have an even further vested interest to make sure that I'm not being repeatedly exposed to harmful particulate matter in the air from a plant that's burning creosote railroad ties them out from my house. Ties, and also the noise is a big factor, it seems like they turn it up full blast at night and you can hear it, it sounds like it sounds like an airport. The creosote's step one, right, and protecting the water, the ground water, and protecting the dust particulate, and then from the burning, the fine air particulate that gets everywhere. I mean that's just step one, you know, ultimate goal would be get them out of here.