 I'd read the book, we'd have a book discussion, and everybody brought a brown bag lunch, and then I prepared. Hi, my name is Jen Covey, I'm the owner of the Campus Artfully Yours, and also JLC Studios. And we're here in Freeport. This is a teaching studio in which I teach classes, creative kits, artsy tweens and teens, and also I have girls' nights, which is awfully fun as well. So it's a little bit like the Peyton Sips, but we work on wood, kind of mixed media, that kind of stuff. One thing that I absolutely love about Freeport is the sense of community. Being up, it's always been this wonderful place of family, friends, you kind of know everybody. And being here as a business, there's a huge network of support. And there's great associations that we like as business people to pull together and support. So there's a lot of love that's around in this community. That's another reason why I love Freeport is how they support their community. I love how the Girl Scouts are out and active, and I wanted to incorporate that into it. So every summer we ended with a community service project. So it was either for the library, the food bank, the Renaissance Association. And our very last project, the girls wrote and illustrated short stories. And they worked, we sold bracelets that they made, and we were able to publish the book. So I put it all together, and the book was published, and we sold it for Make-A-Wish. So it was really a labor of love that is very dear to me. And that's what brought me to the canvas. But at that time we were over in the Carmela's supermarket building. And the owner at that time was Marcy Urbansky, and she was fabulous. She is like salt of the earth people. She has a great soul, very giving heart. And she welcomed our group in. They did a book signing and book readings during the Freeport Christmas celebration, which is really nostalgic in our community. And recently, that all came full circle. When one of my students was in sixth grade, she just got published. And she wrote a book about overcoming bullying. She is a sweetheart, Julia Weselowski, and I hosted her book signing just this past Christmas. So it was super sweet. The chute building, I mean, it's just very iconic here. And that would be an incredible restoration. My understanding is the floors upstairs where the arched windows are, you know, lofts would be incredible. Something like that. And I love the Carmela's building. I don't know if anything can happen with that, but gosh, when we were there, it was the perfect setting other than light, you know. I didn't teach there because the lighting isn't all that great because the ceilings are so high, but they're tin. And I mean, it just has such an eclectic feel to it. So I would love to see something done with that too. Yeah. And a very cool upstairs. The roots run so deep here. You know, it's a place that families stay, you know, and we have so many new families coming to the area. It's a place of potential. It's a place of growth. And I think, you know, with that being said and the community spirit here, it would be a good investment.