 It is an incredibly huge nation with geographic terrain challenges. We've got issues, we've got extremely huge cities and extremely less populated rural areas. And so the challenge is to try to serve all of those individuals as equitably as possible. And the worst may come out a bit easy, but the application and the practicality of it all is quite challenging. So as a regulator what you must do is ensure that you do not try to have this regulatory framework that's like a one-size-fits-all approach. You cannot approach the issues and challenges of the larger cities are not going to be the issues and challenges and opportunities for small rural communities. So when you exact or enact regulation, you have to keep in mind the individual characteristics of those you serve and the communities in which they live. People should not have to move to a big city in order to be adequately provided for it. The options should be there to stay where they're comfortable, but the framework is up to us to ensure that they have the infrastructure needed to be viable in those communities. One of the things you have to do is pause and see where you are in terms of this particular issue. We took a pause particularly, well 23 years ago we took a pause and instituted the American with Disabilities Act, which really looked at infrastructure and all of those barriers for those with disabilities. 23 years later, well 20 years later back in 2010, we took another look at the communications space and said we're not satisfied with where we are in terms of providing options and opportunities for those with special needs. What we saw was that we had to come to terms with the fact that it was 100 years in terms of the telephone opportunities that we said, okay finally we will institute relay services. We had to come to terms that it was 50 years in terms of the manufacturing and distribution of a television network that we finally came to terms with the fact that we needed captioning for those to bridge that gap. So we came to those realities and we are continuing to do so through this act to recognize that there are a whole host of things that we still need to do with this technology evolution to bridge those gaps. So we're working with manufacturers to ensure that the devices in which they produce have as an option the capacity to serve those with special needs. We're ensuring that the regulatory framework, the enforcement framework is reflected in all of that. So all of us have a job to do in order to bridge that gap because it's so important from an educational standpoint, from a healthcare standpoint, and yes from a public safety standpoint because if we allow sometimes more vulnerable citizens to even be more vulnerable with not having the type of access, not having the type of alerts, not having the means for texting and the like, texting to public safety access points, then we are leaving citizens who are already vulnerable and even worse safe than they need to be. So we came to terms with that and we for the past two and a half years have been instituting these provisions of the act and even though our obligation as a relates to act ends on October 9th, we will not end our quest to ensure that there is as much of a robust engagement for those with disabilities as it can be. You on a good day if you were to walk these halls will meet dozens, really literally hundreds of individuals from different walks of life from different countries and what you will find is different as we may look or as differently as we may approach this regulatory space. The challenges and the opportunities, there's so many commonalities. We want to connect our communities. We want to improve the opportunities for these communities. We know that broadband is the best, greatest enabler to this end. It literally is a transformative platform to bridge these divides. It can connect you with a teacher that you do not have in your village. It can connect you in your rural town to healthcare opportunity to say you may not have around the corner. All of these things are made possible by this transformative platform that some of us call broadband, some of us call high-speed internet but all of us know that we need to have the infrastructure and it needs to be an affordable infrastructure for all of our citizens around the world to take advantage of. And that is why this meeting is so important because there are great examples all over the world as to how to ensure that will happen.