 Beginning in late February, early March, we started larvasciding the entire city. We also do, our inspectors do a great job of source reduction, and that's our number one defense against the spread of, you know, the spread of mosquito-borne illness, but in general, just keeping the mosquito population at bay. What we're doing currently is we're going around the affected area. We're reapplying larvascide as we've done, you know, all throughout the summer, and larvascide is a type of chemical that is designed to inhibit the growth of mosquitoes, and so it effectively keeps them from hatching, and it's applied to any place that has standing water or the potential for standing water in the hours of the early morning. Tomorrow we're going to be coming through and trying to knock out the adult mosquito population in the area, and that involves a different kind of chemical, which is called adult deciding, because we're peeling the adult mosquitoes. Another thing we do is we throughout the mosquito season is we trap in different areas of the city, and what that is is we have these little traps that are designed to actually collect mosquitoes, and what we do is we collect those mosquitoes and we send them off to the laboratory for testing, and we do that throughout the city, throughout the mosquito season to try to gauge for having a problem that there's, you know, an escalated number of mosquitoes in a certain area. It doesn't take but a cap full of water for mosquitoes to breed, and they only need 17 days to hatch from, you know, the eggs, hitting the water to them hatching. We like to really encourage citizens to look at their property with new eyes, look for anything that could be holding water and empty that water out so that you can reduce the population. If you have a flower pot that's, you know, saturated with water, it's holding water on top, they can breed in that. If you have kids toys, a big problem that we have is clogged gutters. Our inspectors are more than willing to help you get rid of any kind of source of breeding sites for mosquitoes. We really, really strongly encourage citizens, when you're going out in the evening, you're going to a ball game, you're, you know, going to dinner, take an extra minute and put on some mosquito repellent. You want to use something that has an effective concentration of a chemical that's approved to repel mosquitoes. I have a small jump, so that's what I think about first when I'm worrying about how to protect the citizens. I'm thinking, you know, I want people's kids to be safe. I want their families to be safe. We don't want anybody to catch any kind of nasty disease that can, you know, hurt their fun summer plans. DHEC does a great job of educating the public about preventative measures, what's going on in the state, what you can do to keep yourself and your family safe. What we're trying to do here is we're trying to knock out any of those mosquitoes that are positive for West Nile and moving forward. You know, we're, unfortunately, they've, mosquitoes have been around for millions and millions of years, so we're not going to be able to get rid of all of them, but we want to get rid of the ones that are possibly infected because we want to protect the citizens as quickly and as safely as possible.