 Welcome everybody, it's good to have you here. This is a really important project for all of us, an initiative that really has been started at the federal level and that Pennsylvania actually has been the first state to join in and it's on us campaign. One in five college women are assaulted. Nearly 20% of young women between the ages of 14 and 17 are sexually assaulted, mostly by someone the survivor knows, a classmate, a supposed friend, a relative or a family member and the impact is serious and it's widespread. When these acts are not taken seriously or when they're ignored, victims are singled out for humiliation and those who have committed those crimes go unpunished. That's what happened at Stanford University for example, where a member of the university swim team was caught in the act of raping a young woman. He received only six months in a county jail with probation. While his victim will have to live for the rest of her life with the consequences of feeling violation and the danger that that person caused her. To that end, I have proposed a million dollars, one million dollars in the 16, 17 budget to invest in community partnerships that will help prevent sexual violence to remove barriers to reporting in schools across Pennsylvania. I am determined to make Pennsylvania a shining example to the rest of the world as to what a committed citizenry can do to make our world better. Now, I am very proud to turn this podium over to the person you really wanna hear from and that is the coach of the Villanova Wildcatch Coach J. Wright. Coach, thank you very much. Thank you, Governor. It's an honor for us to be here today. Our team has been all over the Capitol, met everyone and it's been an amazing day but what we're talking about today is most important. And it is on all of us at Villanova, administrators, coaches, students, all of us to prevent sexual violence and to create a society that is safe and enjoyed by everyone.