 Thank you very much. I'm pretty excited to be here. What's kind of amazing is to be here with a group of people from all over the country who are actually getting something done. You know, I'm part of a pretty marginally functional institution. It's called the United States Congress. But to say that there's an area where we actually have some hope. It's energy efficiency. It is an enormous bond between a lot of very conservative members and very liberal members on something that I share with Cory Gartner. We're both cheap. And anything that we can do that saves money, we kind of like. And cheap is good when it comes to energy. Because what you understand is that a kilowatt hour is the cheapest when it's produced by efficiency. That's real. We had that in Vermont where we started the Vermont Energy Efficiency Utility. And we were the first state that actually went low growth, negative. And this was before we had that recession in 2008. And as a result of efficiency efforts, and you all are pioneering on those efforts, we've avoided the cost of very expensive millions of dollars worth of generating facilities. And of course, all of those generating facilities generally use fossil fuels that adds up to global climate change. So what I find so exciting about energy efficiency is that it creates an opportunity for a partnership between the public sector and the private sector. What you need from the public policy sector is the kind of things that we did in Vermont in energy efficiency utility, renewable energy goals, efficiency goals, standards, compliance standards. All of these things have created a level playing field. They're not putting the weight on one side or the other, but they're putting policies where then you can operate, come up with concepts and products that are going to allow for more efficient use of this resource and energy. And you guys all know this, I'm preaching to the choir. But what I love about Vermont is that I meet a lot of local carpenters and plumbers in home repair people and retrofit folks. People who are looking for work and have the skill to then make my house use less energy, be warmer and tighter and cozier in a cold Vermont winter. And then you see some of these big companies that I've worked with that are energy savings performance contracts that can actually bid to work in the Pentagon, let's say, and make that energy efficient. They put the money out in advance to make the retrofits required to get paid as the energy savings are accrued. So there's a lot of sensible policies that we can have where we don't have to get into this incredible debate about whether climate change is real or it isn't. I do work with some of the best minds in the 18th century around here. We're still trying to figure that out. But we don't have to resolve it because even in the 18th century people like you saving money. So you're finding the practical ways to do that. What you need from us in Congress are practical policies that allow you to even shop to be in success. And what's so fantastic about any success you make, whether it's just a slightly more efficient appliance you'd buy, retrofitting a home, getting a big contract with a major federal building for energy savings performance contract is we're creating local jobs. This is all about employment. We're saving money which is all about taxpayer dollars, business dollars, homeowner dollars. And we are actually producing carbon emissions. So this is like the gold standard. And one of the things that I find inspiring working with you, and more so sometimes in working here, a lot of times in Congress we're denying the existence of a problem. In real life you have to face problems. And in real life what you realize is that when you face problems, you solve problems and you feel better about it yourself, the people you work with. So denial is not a climate change policy. It's not an economic policy. Energy efficiency, renewable energy is a jobs policy. It's an economic policy and it's an environmental policy. So to my from the bottom of my heart to each and every one of you, thank you for providing the inspiration to folks in Congress on both sides of the aisle who believe that the work you're doing is absolutely vital to the future of this country, of our economy and our environment. And it's a pleasure to be here with you today. Thank you.