 This week has been really devoted to the opioid roundtables and I'm going around the state just to ask people about what we can do as a state, working together to address the terrible drug overdose epidemic we have in Pennsylvania. It's a medical problem. We need to address it. If we do, we're going to save lives and we're going to save a lot of money that we're now spending on the criminal justice system that we should be spending on treatment. It's really interesting because it's a bipartisan issue. They're Republicans and Democrats, Liberals and Conservatives. Everybody's rallying around this because this is a problem that affects all Pennsylvania. We lost more people to drug overdose in 2014 than we did to traffic accidents. So it's a big, big problem and we cannot ignore it. These roundtables are great because you learn, so I've learned a lot. The placement of the drop-off boxes for drugs, for example, we've got to be careful that we put them in places that are convenient. We have to make sure that we're not just administering naloxone to people who have overdosed. We need to make sure that we're handing those folks off to treatment. People who come to the emergency room looking for treatment and help with addiction problems that we're not just sending them back out to the street because we don't have enough beds. There are a lot of people who are talking at these roundtables and presenting a lot of good ideas, ideas aimed at eliminating the stigma, at providing the resources and aligning the resources with the need in ways that we really haven't done before. So there's a lot of good ideas that have come out of these roundtables. So it was a good week.