 First of all, I want to thank Supervisor Don Saylor. He's a longtime friend of mine when he was a city councilman and I've been a 17-year city councilman in Paradise, and so we've been friends for years. I was born and raised in Davis. My dad who's 93 and my brother still live here at the same house I grew up in, so this is terrific. In fact, Don texted me this morning and asked me if I was going to still be there because there was POTUS was going to be in town and I said No, I'm going to be there. I won't tell you the words I said exactly, but the choice was let's see Davis, suit work beer, mumbo gumbo, playing, and friends versus the president of the United States. It was no contest. Here I am. So things are tough up there. It is ugly. Everybody I've talked to said they've never seen anything so devastating. You'll find one house standing out of a hundred. Every member of our city council lost their homes. My daughter and her husband who works for Cal Fire lost their home. My movie theater that I own there is still standing, but without the population of about 58,000 people between Paradise and Magalia and the surrounding communities that were effectively out of business. So it's pretty sad that you can have something that survives and so it's gonna be difficult for the next eight to ten years really until we can recover, but I'd like to say Paradise is is not gone. It's just closed for remodeling.