 It starts back in the 1950s. That's why Bridgeport is here. We needed a place to better train our Marines so we could go and fight the Korean War. Fast forward to where we are today. We need to prepare for our pure enemies, so we need to be able to train in it just as we train in mountain environments or if we're in a desert environment like 29 palms and we need to go to Afghanistan. Same concept, just a different environment. As a mountain leader, I would say it's very imperative that Marines get sent to these schools to become scout skiers, to become assault climbers, to become mountain leaders, mountain med qualified, mountain comm qualified because we're going to fight in the mountains at some point and it's going to be cold and these battalions need to have those assets within them so that we can be prepared for when we go over so we can do reconnaissance patrols so we can have mountain leaders telling to the companies and battalions what needs to get done. Bridgeport is fundamentally unique. Nowhere else in the Department of Defense does any training area offer altitude, compartmentalized terrain, snow, and these type of conditions.