 It's our annual Black History Month basketball tournament, out at Greenview Park, and even the weather could not keep the fans and keep the community from coming out supporting this really, really good basketball event. Behind me you have the Columbia Fire Department and Richmond County Sheriff's Department whooping it up, competing against each other in a good, good, clean fashion. This event is so special because it's Black History Month and it's a way to commemorate Black History Month, but also it's an opportunity to bring our community together and not often do you get the opportunity to see so many different law enforcement agencies to include the fire department in this capacity in non-enforcement roles and I think what it does more than anything is, I think it helps bridge the gap, I think it helps connect the dots when it comes to our community and the perception that's associated with so many of the law enforcement agencies. So it's been really, really fun, it's been good and enjoyable to engage so many of the different law enforcement agencies to include the fire department and I like the fact that our community members get the opportunity to do the same. Well again, the mayor drives it, he supports it as well as myself and the City of Cunningham Parks and Rec Department and it's really the kind of focus on the collaboration and the ability to come together of the different agencies in the city and the community. Obviously there's conversation last 10, 15 years about the relationships between particularly the police and then other service agencies and under over-stressed communities, particularly those of the black community and we want to make sure we stress that there is a relationship there, there can be a relationship there. Conversation, honest conversation, truth of conversation has to be had though and then events like this will just kind of come out and there's no pressure for anybody to kind of meet and have conversations to be continued, that's what the purpose is. It's not a politicized event, it is free to the community to come out and participate, hopefully we're growing it, the atmosphere, Greenview Park, City of Columbia and as we invite other agencies to participate in it, hopefully more of the community will come and see that it is an event just to come watch some good basketball as well, organized basketball and then just to celebrate Black History Month. This is what I do, this is what I've been doing for 20-some-odd years, teaching and supporting communities, particularly communities that look like me and then the biggest, biggest part of it is probably information and we have to have an honest conversation about not only race but also the ability to overcome past issues, understand that it is relevant today, so a big part of my involvement is to get the youth out, to get the word out, we think about it being regulated 38, 29 days depending on which February it is, our history is American history, it is a combined thing, it is not a derogatory, it should not become something that's negative for anybody else but we have to be included in those conversations and to have both sides, the three sides, four sides, whoever is listening should be a part of it so we can have some intelligent outcomes from it.