 Well, thank you so much Sarah and thank you all for being here, we really appreciate it. My name is Drew Romani, I lead product at the City of San Jose for our affordable housing initiatives and I'm so excited to share at Bloom Housing with you all today, we can be just launched in San Jose. So Bloom is really a one-stop-shop portal that enables affordable housing applicants, phone seekers to more efficiently, effectively, and actively find and apply to affordable housing. It also simplifies the application of processing for developers and property managers. Given the affordable housing shortage that we experience in California, I don't need to tell any of you about that, we all see and experience it all around us every day. You know, this portal is just so important and you know, it's currently just such a big challenge to find and secure a place to live for so many of our residents and Bloom goes a long way to helping address the problem. So, you know, all the stakeholders in the affordable housing ecosystem experience a lot of challenges today. If you're a home seeker, you have to fill out a lengthy application process and not know where you are in the status of your application at the end of it. If you're a developer property manager, you have to manually enter data about applications. If you are a jurisdiction, if you're a considered county, you don't have good data to actually understand the needs of your residents. Finally, if you're a housing counselor, you don't have the ability to provide the best possible support to your residents. So, Bloom really solves all of that, right? It's a one-stop shop. It centralizes all the affordable housing resources in one location. It makes finding and applying affordable housing a lot easier. It improves the developer experience. It reduces the cost of data entry. And finally, and this is really important, it enables better data collection and, you know, and just better reporting capabilities to drive better policy decision making. So, Bloom really consists of three different interfaces. So, we have the public portal, which allows residents to apply to affordable housing and find what's near them. We have the partner portal. So, that really enables property managers and developers to process the applications. And finally, we have the jurisdiction portal. So, that allows a city or county to discover what listings are actually available in their jurisdiction and also what number of applications through those listings. So, our overarching principle in building this platform was to bring the best possible user experience for our applicants. I'm just going to focus on the partner portal for simplicity. We wanted to make the experience as close to like a Zillow or a Airbnb as possible and just make it very easy with clear steps and simple calls to action. Another area that we really were focused on was making the language very simple and jarred in free, easy to explain. As you can see, there were two ways of applying within our portal. Either online or you can download a paper application. There's a small percentage of our users that apply in person. And so, we want to make sure we are looking out for their needs as well. So, as you can see here, we provided a very clear step-by-step process to actually apply into an affordable listing. We recognize that, in general, our users are really overwhelmed and just finding formal housing is really, really difficult. So, we wanted to just clarify and make the process as simple as possible for them. The other thing I just want to mention is we provide updates in real time about the status of their application. This can be game-changing and really life-changing in many instances because current process is just so paid that you may not know where your application lies and whether you're going to be likely to even find it at a certain point. I also want to just show one image of the partner portal, as you can see. If you're a property manager, you can see all the listings in one page. And the other kind of cool feature here is you can actually see duplicate applications apply to them so that also reduces data entry costs. Finally, all of this has led to a lot of promising signs of impact. So, it only takes on average six minutes to process an application. That's a greater than 90% reduction from the current process. It's a really big deal. In addition, we've seen just in last year in San Jose, close to 6,000 applications. We anticipate that will only grow as more listings become available. And a couple of other quick things. It's available in four languages, which enables a lot of our minority and left behind communities to apply to listings as well. Thank you.