 It was a mindset shift for us where, on deployment, we had a COVID-free bubble established and then, going back to a world where COVID was out there, took a little bit of adjusting and realizing that, hey, the second you got off the ship, that bubble was burst. Then there are going to be real risks out there that we didn't really have to deal with throughout most of 2020 when we were deployed. We had a whole standard operating procedures developed for when we returned, where we would identify quickly a COVID case, either by evaluating them at the hospital in the acute respiratory care clinic or evaluating it on the ship as we did underway. The thing that people don't realize about the COVID support team is everything that it takes to get one person taken care of. Anything related to providing food essentials, ROM, quarantine, isolation, that's what the purpose of the COVID support team is. The CRC is kind of the central nervous system or the brains, the directors of all the different policies we do and then all the different logistics, the care and the feeding and whatever they need there, we kind of direct. It's a 14-day quarantine if all goes well. So we manage the inflow and outflow very directly with the COVID support team and supply to make sure that they have everything they need over there. We partnered with the hospital here in Seafay to allow us to actually organize the waterfront vaccination effort. Right away, it was sort of deemed that the Ronald Reagan would be a priority to get vaccinated on the waterfront because just the volume of people that we have and our deployment schedule. We've probably applied about 24,000 man-hours of effort just since our return in November purely to organize our response, get people to care they need, stop the spread of the disease. That was completely different than anything we had done before. We've been fortunate to benefit from a very high participation rate in the vaccine and the extraordinary effectiveness of herd immunity in defeating COVID. But this story really isn't about COVID-19. It's more about the ingenuity and resilience of our sailors as well as our Navy's commitment to continuing our mission while also taking care of our crews, our families, and our local community.