 Hi, I'm Sergeant Kimberly Lovato with the Denver Police Department with District 1 and we're out here today to help one of our elderly citizens that we have come across. I've known this resident for over 10 years but she's never allowed me into her house and one day on a Sunday evening a plumber called and put in a call for service for us to come and do a welfare check on this individual. When officers got here it was it was pretty sad the conditions of the house that we walked into and having known this woman and the services she provided to this city she is a retired city employee and she's worked with the Peace Corps and she's just a really neat lady. We decided to pull together and start helping her so collectively the officers of District 1 along with another city agency got together and we got a group of officers to come and start assisting this resident to clean up her house and to get things going that way she can live the rest of her years in a clean house and just let her know that she's not alone. She has no surviving family members and no relatives anywhere in any other part of the United States so she is truly by herself and we wanted to make sure that she knew she wasn't going to be alone. She's 90. I'm the director of the Denver Office on Aging and I am out here today working with the Denver Police Department which is phenomenal. Denver Police have a lot of respect from their community. They're giving back to the community. What normally would be probably a very agitated or very anxiety-ridden woman is not because she knows the police officers. There's an authority that comes with that that helps us get a lot of that debris out of the home because most of the time they're very reluctant to part with anything so it's a phenomenal I am just amazed at what you're doing today. And it's just been a true blessing to be able to help this elderly citizen. This is going to be one of those times where officers can really see the difference they make in someone's life.