 Tax fairness is a very important issue to me, and I know to a lot of other people, and tax fairness takes many different forms. For example, there are lots of people who manage to avoid paying their income tax, and they get away with that for a while. But I'll tell you, every time we have a fiscal crisis, I advance the idea that we ought to be investing in more auditors so that we can get people who owe taxes to pay their taxes. And as a result, we end up with a system that is fairer, because instead of you and I and others who pay their taxes, subsidizing those who owe taxes but have not paid them, we get them to pay their taxes. And we find that once you give a tax amnesty or you relieve them of any penalties or interest, if they'll come forward, once they get back onto the tax rolls, they tend to stay on the tax rolls. And so it not only produces some immediate revenue, but it also produces more reliable tax collections on into the future. Another way in which we try to create tax fairness in Massachusetts is to identify those areas where people may be finding ways to avoid paying taxes. And one of the ways that they do it in the corporate world is if they operate in many states, they find the state that has the least tax burden in terms of corporate income tax, and they export the profitable portions of their business onto the books of those states so that they will pay less tax, even though they're delivering the service out of Massachusetts and maybe even to Massachusetts residents and taxpayers. So there's a bill that we sponsored over a number of years called Combined Reporting, which would force the corporations to pay taxes in Massachusetts for the business that they conduct out of Massachusetts. To just give you a sense of scale of the value of that, once we were able to fix that, in the very first year we saw more than $300 million of additional tax collections based on those corporations that had previously been beating their Massachusetts tax obligations by organizing themselves outside of the state, even though they were headquartered here and even though they were doing business and selling goods and services to the people of Massachusetts and to others out of Massachusetts. And so this is just one example of a change in our tax system that we were able to accomplish in recent years. That went into effect in 2008. So you can do the math, we're already in the fourth tax season since then. So that's more than a billion dollars of revenue that's available to support services here in Massachusetts. By the way, to support those same corporations because they're asking for qualified people through our education system, for reliable transportation, for a court system, for environmental protection, for all of the things that we all need. So now they're paying a fairer share of the tax burden to help support the very services that they're using.