 Thank you. Thank you so much. I'm really delighted to be here. It's an enormous honour. Look, I think as we heard from the last session, the research is very clear. Access to public green space provides so many health benefits. I like to use this tagline making public space everyone's business because it's incredibly important that we all acknowledge the value of them. The physical and mental benefits, how they can increase physical activity levels, boost people's moods and lowering stress and anxiety levels. So it's really important that we are showcasing that in all the programs and the tools and the resources that we are leading. And there's the why slide. I like to use this slide. It's everything from the amenity and experience creating walkable active connected spaces. Of course it's about shade. It's about air quality. It's about climate change. And it's also about character. Very, very important determining factor into the enjoyment that people have in their local areas. So when we talk about the Premier's priority that we're leading, which is indeed called greener public spaces, it's about walkable access to great green public spaces from people's homes. So we measure that within 10 minutes walk of people's homes. So roughly 800 metres. Of course we prefer 400 metres because we know that people who are close to green space use it daily. And of course that then helps their health and all those other things that I noted before. The program that we're leading is everything from advocating the importance, the value of it. How do we measure the value and I'll talk to that a little bit. How do we think up the pilot ideas through to the legacy ideas and systems change is at the heart of it. So of course public spaces in the news. We've all been reading about it. It's been our lifeline hasn't it during COVID. And of course walking has been the centrepiece of that. We move very fast in 2020 to measure the impact that public space was having. We've done the same survey in 2021. And what we found was that there was actually growth. It was very high level use of our public space and incredible growth. Up to 68% of people value their parks the most 48% walking trails, of course beaches figured and a number of others, but demand for public space definitely increased as did walking and cycling. So there we see the growth and this report is about to be released very happy to share it with anyone public spaces during COVID-19. And I think there you can see that growth in parks use right through to off leash dog areas. Thomas you mentioned that your love of walking your dog as do I and the health benefits of getting out with our four legged friends. What we do to in the program that we're leading in the Department of Planning is a huge amount of research. And a lot of it is community research where we where we talk to community about what they want to do in public space. And you know the interesting thing is always that walking hiking jogging is always the most but depending on where it is in Sydney in the western suburbs of Sydney for instance water access to water is increasingly becoming something that the community really want to see. Critical to to the work that we're doing is that systems change that we need so we've developed a public space charter which is in draft form hopefully soon to be released. It's one of the key pieces in guiding our program, and it's that commitment to quality, I think that you mentioned Thomas in your earlier talk, you know quantity is one thing but quality really matters so we've come up with 10. I don't think there's anything radical about these 10. But they've been really road tested and we've, you know, we're pretty confident they're right that everything from the spaces needing to be well managed green and resilient healthy and attractive critical things like open and welcoming. And, of course, quarter this is connecting with country at the heart of what we do. The other things that we've developed is the simple tool that anybody can use when they're thinking about their local park to major precinct planning with four key questions. How can I get there. Am I able to stay am I able to play and participate and am I able to connect. And they grew from the everyone can play program which was really about play spaces across New South Wales to get families out all ages actually 29 out enjoying their local spaces and very specific to particular places so that they're not just that that regulation playground that gets dumped across a geographical area something really special about them needing to be fit for purpose. The other thing we did was this is toolkit this two page toolkit free open like all our resources online to be able to use. The program objectives across all our half a billion dollars worth of funding programs for greater public space are supporting investment in the creation of high quality public space addressing critical open space shortfalls. I think we heard a little bit about that earlier in one of the talks, and then here, how do we achieve those program objectives. It's very much about connecting the network, I think is important right to have green spaces but the continuation we know people like to walk loops and what 5k roots and the rest of it. And so that's the one I wanted to draw out there. The other thing that we're leading that's part of these programs is parks for people eight new parks extraordinary parks that we're co designing with community we're drawing on their advice three times they're helping us shape what they want and the three top vision statements The third were a peaceful place to relax a fun place with lots of different activities and play equipment and an exciting and adventure ventures discovery to that idea of how do we plan for the types of places that people want. And my second to last slide is just this reliance I suppose it's the other pair to the why at the top of my presentation. We need to think about those environmental benefits, obviously attractive green comfortable sustainable the social benefits you know that's to do with the community health of our societies that economic benefits we know that there's serious economic benefit and an attraction of, of people to places that agree, and of course the cultural how to how do these places become distinctive places for the community to express themselves in. And I'm going to end on a yoga slide I think I heard mention of yoga earlier, a beautiful one in in yam I think this one is. But yeah, thank you very much back to you.