 Working on collaborations. Number one, I was at a street feeding summit six years ago before Hayden's parole agreement was open. And some of the same issues and concerns were brought up. And I will tell you, it was a very different organization at that time. The administration at Hayden was very prescriptive in how they wanted you to behave, what they wanted you to do. And I'm telling you, it's a different culture and a different climate now. I've met with several of your organizations. I already told Mark I was going to put him on the spot, but I've not taken him to the streets ministry. The first time that Mark and Mike came to the campus, they kind of looked at me like, okay, what do you want now? What do you want now? It really was an invitation to collaborate. And I said, I don't know what I want. I know that we need help. We've got 1,500 people on that campus experiencing homelessness at any given night. And we can't do it all. So we're talking about opportunity. There's great opportunity for collaboration in this room. So working with people to the streets ministries, they're not under contract from other health care services to do some evaluation about what's working on the campus, particularly to the courtyard, what improvements need to be made. And then they'll be talking to people that they're feeding on the street to say, what keeps you from coming to the courtyard? We're a learning growing organization. If you haven't been to Hayden in the past couple of years, and you have my personal invitation to please come and see what's different. We've got some fairly monumental changes happening at the courtyard. The original vision of the courtyard was to save sleeping, get people out of the streets. We're now really looking at how do we effectively engage people. We're opening an integrated care clinic to provide for mental health needs, physical health needs. We're expanding all of the permanent roof line on the courtyard. We're trying to do some utilization on the courtyard to require building across the street from the courtyard to provide additional services to the people experiencing homelessness on the courtyard, as well as job opportunities and sort of a step up facility that's a climate control facility. So if you haven't been to the campus lately, again, I would invite you and I will personally give you a tour, show you around, show what some of the changes are. One of the messages I've heard from many of the people that are feeding on the street is partly about food and hunger, but it's partly about service, engagement and fellowship. One of the challenges is many of your organizations don't have capacity to feed five to six hundred people, which is five to six hundred, seven hundred, which is what we're feeding on the courtyard. And thinking as a community, we have capacity to feed those five, six, seven hundred and to create other methods to feed the margin of the house, those that have to choose a meal overpaying rent. So I think there's great opportunity in this room and I think this is our most opportunity to really think strategically how do we all work together to make this happen. So I would address any questions you might have. Yes. Give me your name. Yes, my name is Scott Packerson, B-C-K-E-R-S-O. Scott, it seems like this is sort of set outside the line a little bit here too. I think it's going to awesome. Scott, if you want to smack the community first program, because they've initiated up there, hopefully it is now running at the final level. Status on it at this point. Part of the resolution for helping the rest of the problem with homeless on the street and feeding homeless would be to provide opportunities to move beyond homeless. And it looks like we might have an opportunity to implement some of the whole house first programs that are beginning in various cities around the country. California, Utah, Austin, where you provide opportunities for people to get on the street. Not everybody. You look at them and find people who have the desire to do that, to move in that direction. And as a group, we could provide a collaborative effort to make that happen. Absolutely. And there are housing first dollars that will be coming through to continue. Part of the rationale of why I took the job at the center, so I worked with the Center for Healthcare Services, they made it for hope because the center oversees the courtyard. And frankly, many of you know I was one of the more household contradicts of the courtyard. So what I learned is if you complain long enough, talk something, they quit you in charge of it. With a lot of work with the soft elbow regional alliance for the homeless, we're really starting to try to target the courtyard and target chronic homeless. And one of the strategies for that is a housing first initiative, which requires intensive wraparound support that frankly, even by itself, is not able to provide. But as a community collaborative, we can certainly provide those supports. And court is on ministries was another group that we've had multiple conversations about how we start to work together because we had a disconnect five years ago. And we're really trying to rebuild those bridges and partnerships with the community. Any questions for Scott or comments for? I'm fairly natured, but one of the pitches as a core team member, I've just been a volunteer that makes sandwiches in the kitchen a few times a month. But I know that mobile lives and fishes founder Mr. Graham in Austin mobile lives and fishes is probably the largest. The last numbers I saw, they were the largest organization serving homeless in Austin. They also have a program, housing program incorporated in the homeless building their own homes. And it might be something that those are in charge in the city looking at getting those who want homes a home. It might be worth talking to those in Austin about that. I've probably just called community first and taken it to the streets ministry hosted us and caught us home. I know a couple of our city councilmen are interested in going out to take a visit. I've been a community councilman to Meno for sure. So we're making arrangements to make that happen. We're looking at it as a potential model and it's particular to chronic and it's sort of a lack of a better term to sanction the camp. I mean people are looking for community and so it's the only place they're finding community is an encampment and that's what they want. How do we help them to get that home in that community?