 There's a growing threat in our communities of big oil trying to turn California into an extreme oil superhighway. Phillip's desire is to bring in 20,800 fully loaded crude oil trains each year. That's a half billion gallons with a bee of crude crisscrossing through Slow County forever. We know that this is a project intended to carry tar sands all the way from Alberta, Canada down to SLO. So instead of just a few cars, which have always been moving, we're talking massive trains and a high concentration of risk. So we're getting down to the dirtiest, hardest, most difficult to extract sources of fossil fuels. So the entire process of extracting it is incredibly toxic and the transportation aspect of getting it here is very toxic. By bringing oil by rail, that puts the entire coastal corridor in jeopardy. The reason for that is very simply, the oil trains have found to explode, they have found to derail, they have found to spill. So for example, in West Contra Costa County, there's 27 schools of the West County Unified School District that are within the evacuation zones of explosions and fires from the rail line. They would come through downtown, they would come through neighborhoods with a 50 to 100 feet of homes in my council district in South San Jose. We have our entire city built around Union Pacific Railroad lines. Do we know how many fire stations are in the zone? So at least four that I can think of off the top of my head. There's a lack of training, there's a lack of resources that I feel would definitely hamper responding to something like that properly. No community has enough resources immediately available for any large disaster and that's true of large wildfires or plane crashes or rail car derailments. We're already at a crisis moment and so we need to keep all of those fossil fuels in the ground and especially the kind of fuels that this train is hoping to bring through. Do we want to continue to support and invest and create infrastructure and give subsidies to a 19th century dirty fuel? Or do we want to be Silicon Valley, the Bay Area, California and invest and put energy into 21st century clean energy? That is our right to do as Americans. We have that right to speak up and to really express ourselves. And at the end of the day that's the only thing that's going to stop these kinds of projects. Across California this movement is growing. It is led by people who are on the front lines of this issue and we invite you to join us for our communities, for our health, for our safety and for our climate.