 SSAs are a subset of school choice. It's one form of school choice. There are other ways that you can give families choices in education. Most of the opposition to school choice is not from the parents. As you suggest, polls suggest that parents are very much in favor of families having choices. The teachers union tends to come out against it. They're fearful that school choice is going to start to take funds away from public schools. I don't think that there's strong evidence for that. It's an understandable fear. And I think legislators are trying to build in protections, in fact, in Missouri. If a child leaves a public school and receives an ESA and takes it to a private school, if they attend a public school, leave and attend a private school with an ESA. That public school continues to get that child's funding for, I think, up to five years. And so a lot of the arguments of opponents don't seem to hold water.