 One of the things that makes the problems that we're facing under a continuing resolution and sequestration is the lack of authority that the Navy has to move money from other accounts into our operating accounts. It is our operating accounts, what we call OMIN, operating and maintenance dollars for Navy that are affected most by these two problems. And right now we don't have the permission, the authority, from Congress to move money from other accounts, like procurement for instance, or science and technology, into those operating accounts to preserve some of that funding level. And so without that authority we have a little flexibility. We have no flexibility under sequestration. It's a 9% cut for everybody, it's a 9% cut in our operating accounts. We don't have any choice in that. Under the continuing resolution we have some measure of flexibility inside of that and we've made some of these belt tightening measures very clearly and very deliberately. But what really hurts is the inability to move money around from other accounts into it to try to stave off some of this. And so that's something that we're trying to work through.