 So this week the Hawaii National Guard surf key has been conducting hurricane response training for wide area search using the joint hazard assessment team concept. And what we were able to do is get together the Hawaii surf key, Nevada surf key, as well as California surf key to form a small group to kind of test and evaluate work through tactics, techniques, and procedures for hurricane response using Cree assets but in a small teams format. This type of training is important for the National Guard response to support our National Guard civil support duties. What we're doing is showcasing how Cree that's National Guard Bureau's Seaburn Response Enterprise assets can be utilized in a small teams format vice having to deploy the whole team essentially showcasing the modularity of the Seaburn Seaburn Response capability within the National Guard. We're leveraging existing capabilities within the Cree Seaburn Response Enterprise, which is our extractors, the rescue elements, medical as well as hazmat capabilities. But the way we're pushing the envelope and kind of using a novel employment is the J-Hack concept where we're bringing together multiple resources, multiple technical specialties. So we're really emphasizing bringing together the extraction, rescue, medical, seaburn, hazmat, as well as with first responders to increase interoperability. Over the course of three days, we've had nine lanes training events that span from collapse structure with hazmat, both ticks and Tim's chemicals as well as radiological, to rollover car accidents involving flammable compounds, and then all the way through a wide area search of a large area where we have a mass casualty event of over 40 personnel that had to be searched, found, extracted, and then medically managed. I think the National Guard as a whole over several years is finding more and more the need or the demand signal from first responders and our civilian entities. And this is just another way that we're trying to meet and answer that call and identify capability gaps and better support our community and first responders.