 I think a lot of the everyday ways we interact with maps, right, we think of them as this like neutral objective tool. But in a lot of ways, maps have tremendous representational power, right? They've been used to extract resources, to erase communities, to invisibleize histories, right? And I think a lot of our work in the project is really thinking about how to activate the representational and political potential of map making. The Anti-Eviction Mapping Project is a volunteer collective. We have chapters in New York City, Los Angeles, and San Francisco Bay Area. And kind of at the core of what we do, we produce maps and narrative work about gentrification, displacement, and resistance. The project emerged in 2013 during a moment in the San Francisco Bay Area of heightened evictions, and largely in response to what's collectively known as the Tech Boom 2.0. The project has produced dozens of maps that are really targeted at using data to support anti-identification and tenant struggles. And we produce our maps in partnership with grassroots organizers really in an effort to think through ways technology can be used. And leverage in anti-identification fights. We often use the term counter mapping to describe the work that we do. So really thinking through ways the maps that we make can be a tool to curb predatory real estate practices and also to expose the material consequences of gentrification that on a more objective or neutral map wouldn't be made visible. We're really invested in as a collective not producing just maps for map's sake or just releasing data just to have it be kind of floating out in the world, but really thinking through ways we can produce maps that are accompanied by action and support building momentum behind local tenant fights and struggles. My staying power project, which is similarly intended to center the first person narratives of NYC residents and was really informed by a map that we made in 2018 called the worst of Victor's NYC map. And one of the things that that map surfaced is that NYC was one of the top of Victor's in 2018. And although it's a lot more difficult right to put a face to nitro evictions in the way that you can with a private landlord in thinking through a project to implement with my laundry map project residency, I was really interested in thinking through ways I could sort of use those same narrative based tools to think through the current state of NYC and create space for residents to really drive the narratives around their lived experiences in public housing.