 The Gulf of Mexico Alliance is a regional ocean partnership that was established in 2004 and part of the alliance has six priority teams and the coastal resilience team is one of those teams and we focus on working with communities and helping them become more sustainable and adaptable to coastal and man-made hazards. What specifically does that community work until? We're working on establishing a stronger green infrastructure, a lot of communities, even at the homeowner level, they want to know more about it, whether that be living shorelines as an offshoot of alternative bulkheads. We've been working with municipalities to strengthen stormwater as well. So a lot of communities will go through the resilience index assessment which is assessing their resilience and a lot of municipalities will take the assessment and find ways to either strengthen or look for weaknesses where they didn't know that they had before. So that's probably one of the major projects that the team really was working on right now. What role do your federal partners play in the work you do? Even though GOMA is a state-led partnership we rely heavily on our federal partners. We have a federal working group with over 150 members from different various federal agencies. A lot of our community grants that we give to municipalities and to communities to become more sustainable come through those federal agencies. So our partnership with them is vital in continuing to become more sustainable.