 So welcome. Thank you for coming out and broadcasting our message today, everyone who's assembled here. It looks like one last camera is running over here. Are you ready to go? I'm just trying to be inclusive here. So what we're trying to do right now is share a message with the public, but also model that we have to be careful and do things differently right now. So if you notice, we're all staying about three to six feet apart. We're doing this outside and then we're all going to go back to what we have to do to stay safe and take care of each other. This COVID-19 pandemic reminds us of our common humanity and about how interconnected all people are to each other. An injury to one is indeed an injury to all. During this public health crisis, we must come together to take better care of each other. Caring for the collective starts with caring for yourself by using universal precautions. You probably are sick of hearing this by now, but I'm going to say it again because we cannot say this enough. We have to take these everyday preventive actions to help stop the spread of germs. Wash your hands. Wash your hands, wash your hands, wash your hands. Often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. And if soap and water is not available, use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer. Avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth with unwashed hands. Avoid close contact with people who are sick. Stay home when you are sick. Cover your cough or sneeze with your arm or a tissue. Then throw the tissue in the trash. Clean and disinfect frequently touched objects and surfaces. And if you feel sick right now, don't be afraid to get help. Please call your primary care doctor first. And if you can't get through to them, try the urgent care. And if you can't get through to them, try calling the emergency. If you can, we need to avoid just showing up at doctor's offices and emergency rooms because we don't want to clog the system of care and overwhelm our providers when there's people who truly need emergency help. So call first if you can or have someone call for you if you can. Keep in mind that the emergency room is not the place you want to be waiting around during a public health emergency. However, if you have serious symptoms, do call 911 and follow their advice. So at this time, we need to minimize the transmission of disease and we need to flag the curve of infection before the health system gets overwhelmed. And we're going to do this by social distancing. That's why people are seeing businesses being closed right now and shut down temporarily. It's to create social distancing. Social distancing is a public health practice that aims to prevent sick people from coming in close contact with healthy people in order to prevent or slow down the spread of disease. And this is one of the best ways to slow down the spread of coronavirus or any other disease at this time. So in order to create social distance, it's recommended that people avoid public spaces, that we stay six feet away from each other, that we reduce or eliminate mass gatherings. And remember that even small gatherings can be dangerous for people who have chronic disease or people with immunosuppression or are elders. Social distancing is a strategy meant to prevent disease and can have positive consequences. But we need to make sure that we do not cause harm with this and that we don't cause panic. We need to be thinking about everyone right now about others as well as ourselves because we're all in this together. So please make sure that you have food but we don't need to hoard. Aggressively hoarding food can lead to food scarcity for the most vulnerable. So in general, be mindful of your neighbors. We need to look out for each other right now. Social distancing does not mean social isolation. We have to find, and luckily many people are on the precedented level and don't forget about the people out there who don't have access to that shift towards greater social distancing behavior. It's important that we build networks of mutual aid to take care of each other through this crisis. Next up, we have Kaya to talk about local efforts to engage in mutual aid and solidarity with our neighbors. We're talking about the work that we are doing, participating in the work of helping us doing what we can to flatten this curve. Mutual aid recognizes that it's the state. We encourage you to connect. It increases the impacts of COVID-19 outbreak. It is all too clear that neither federal, state or local governments or private companies are responding adequately to the public health crisis at hand. Health will stop. Because of the structure of our economic system, people are faced with the difficult choice between public safety or economic survival can shut down and workers and families can stay home when necessary to protect without pain, sick leave or health care face calamity. This is why the state of Vermont must act to mitigate the social and economic impact of this unprecedented situation. First line of defense for workers fighting for the interest of working-class vermoners when faced with this crisis. Each organization presents each organization present of their facilities. It also means lifting the CIGASA to allow the entry of medical staff. Likewise in Yemen where the United States has provided military, financial and political support that destroyed the country which was described to be going through the worst humanitarian crisis now is having to face the pandemic of coronavirus. The safety and the protection of migrants and refugees being held in unsensory conditions with no access to their families or legal support at the northern and southern borders which also be taken into account. As opposed to funding the building of separating walls and detention facilities and ICE data centers the efforts must be put instead towards welcoming anyone seeking refuge of fleeing oppression at the borders with open arms. All the funds that were previously allocated for unnecessary wars or imperial ambitions must now be reallocated for the purposes of saving us all from the madness of the system that allowed them to handle this crisis. This includes the federal government's financial involvement to be used in securing the lives of CIG workers