 Hi everybody. Let me start by saying this is really disappointing. I think we all ought to be disappointed. The citizens of Pennsylvania, I think, sent me here to Harrisburg to do serious work, not to play games, and I think that's why all of us are here. They expect us to address the problems that Pennsylvanians face, not to ignore them, and they actually want us to accomplish something. They don't want this. They don't want us to patronize them with smoke and mirrors, with the same old, same old that has taken us to a bad place. I have tried to work, and I will continue to try to work with Republican leaders on these and other issues. I have already worked diligently with them on things like pensions, on things like liquor, and I'm waiting for the same courtesy from them on things that I think are important to all Pennsylvanians. Pennsylvanians want real property tax relief. They actually want to invest in education, and they want a severance tax, a reasonable and fair severance tax to help pay for it, and they want us to honestly address the structural budget deficit. That's what they want. I refuse, as governor, to let a few willful people hold our Commonwealth hostage to a few narrow interests and a status quo that has everyday Pennsylvanians struggling with underfunded schools. We've had numerous credit downgrades in Pennsylvania and an underperforming economy. Now, I understood when I came here, I understood that addressing these problems honestly would not be easy. I mean, these folks couldn't get anything done when they controlled the government. They had the House of Representatives, the Senate, and the Governor's Office for a long time for four years, and they couldn't get anything done, so it's clear that this is going to be hard, maybe even harder, with divided government. And the budget I saw today is an example of that. Evidently, they can't do anything more than they've done in the past. It continues. This budget that I just saw, and if it gets to my desk, it continues the gimmick riddled budgeting that shifts more than $563 million in current year expenses to next year's deficit, kicking the can down the road. After taking into consideration the fine print, it basically adds net about $8 million, essentially nothing to the funding of public education. This meager investment is basically less than 2% of the $500 million we need just to restore the Corbett cuts to education. This budget ignores recent cost and revenue adjustments by more than $300 million, including $100 million to pay for critical seniors programs like prescription drugs. The higher education investments in the GOP budget are so small, they're so small that it will take eight years just to restore their own higher education cuts. It completely eliminates funding to address a growing heroin epidemic in Pennsylvania. This budget doesn't make any sense. So I'm hoping that if this is the budget I get that the Republicans and the legislature, after this, after I veto it, they will suspend the games and get down to the real business of Pennsylvania, that we're actually going to address, honestly and forthrightly, the structural budget deficit, that we're actually going to fund education. We're going to fund our schools, that we're actually going to have a fair and responsible and reasonable severance tax that does that and that we're going to give property tax relief to Pennsylvanians. So if this budget gets to me in the form we have right now, in the form that has all these games and continues with the games of the past, there's nothing more than the status quo, I will veto it.