 Just four months after the devastating October 2017 wildfires, more than one million tons of fire-related debris has now been removed in Lake Mendocino, Napa and Sonoma counties. Debris removal is now completed in Coffee Park, one of the hardest-hit neighborhoods in the town of Santa Rosa, and the debris removal process is also 100 percent complete in Lake County. The fact that these major milestones have been reached in such a short span of time is the result of the consolidated effort between local, state and federal officials working together to meet these deadlines. We wanted to aggressively move on getting the debris cleaned up. We knew that winter was coming. We have not seen something this large and this complex from the debris standpoint since the 1906 earthquake. And so, you know, we wanted to get all hands on deck moving very, very aggressively. It's a monumental task to do it in the time period that we're able to do it in over winter and heavy rains, difficult times, with over, some days with over 2,000 trucks moving in a day through the holidays, just a monumental task. As we look past and previous disasters or fire disasters, it's taken us years to get to this point and to be able to get to this point where we're actually starting to be building within months after a fire of this magnitude is a enormous task. The magnitude is truly significant. When you look at over the past three months where we've been and we're at now, two days ago we went over 3,000 parcels completed of debris removal operations to highlight 2,300 here in Sonoma County alone. That puts us at roughly 65 percent complete. While the neighborhoods like Coffee Park and counties like Lake have been completed, there is still much work to be done, but with each completed lot, crews are able to move on to other areas and continue the progress. The good news is now that Coffee Park is complete, those crews that have been working here are moving on forward to other focus areas and that allows us to expedite our schedule and complete as soon as possible. I can tell you that we are collectively moving, we are setting a new bar on the speed at which we have responded to these things. There is no other state in the country that states that have been hit by major hurricanes in Texas and in Puerto Rico and in Florida are not even close to where we're at today and our events happened after theirs. For more information on the debris removal process from the October wildfires, you can visit wildfirerecovery.org or sign up for the latest news at oesnews.com. For all of us at Cal OES, I'm Brian May.