 Thank you, Mr. Chair and I too, um, and please to vote in favor of the amendment and I'm grateful to my colleagues for supporting many of the ideas and projects which I advocated for and are included in this final amendment. I appreciate the care that staff took in preparing this draft and I think the amendments make a strong document stronger. I think our priorities should be clear to the American public and understandable and I in my view, the ideas embodied in this amendment do just that. I know commissioner Trump, thank you just highlighted a couple of the ideas that are included here, but I will repeat them hopefully quickly and to highlight some of the priorities that are reflected my priorities that are reflected in the amendment. The need for progress on nice modernization along with the commission's commitment to equity work on older consumer safety hazards, particularly focusing on risks that carry a disparate impact with respect to gender and the inclusion of PFAS and chronic hazards as an agency priority. In addition to those, the amendment before us reflects my priority that we engage with stakeholders on battery ingestion. This would build on the work on the NPR and final rule related to warning labels and packaging that has been directed by Congress. It also captures the importance of civil penalty work as an agency priority and it promotes efforts at safety equity through dialogues with underserved communities. Finally, it directs staff to take stock of agency communications particularly in light of the impact of current of changes as a result of the state sleep with babies act or infant sleep rule and our CS rule among others. Again, I think this is a robust amendment. I'm grateful to my colleagues. Grateful to staff and I'm proud to support it. Thank you. Mr. Chair. Thank you, Mr. Chair. And thanks again to all the staff with our hard work and for the efforts of my fellow commissioners. This concludes today's decisional meeting of the consumer product safety commission.