 Baziya, tell us what's going on here today at Kennedy Park. Oh, exactly. We're working with different kids from different church. They're coming to help how clean the Kennedy Park and then it'd be different. It's good to know about other cultures, multi-cultures in Maine. And some people from New York, some people from New Hampshire, can educate different areas for the kids. But we'd love to be with them to see what we have in Maine. And what are they doing here today? Today we're going to do in-cleanings. In this other group now they're doing a paint and some then they're picking the trash around the Kennedy Park. And what do they learn from this experience today? It's like sometimes you gotta think about yourself, but think about other. And then I believe even people who live in New Hampshire, in the Kennedy Park today, they're going to learn something different. Because if you live in Kennedy Park and you drop the trash and somebody came far away to pick it up, it may be a little bit different. And I believe from today up, some people they're going to start to realize that's not the way it's supposed to be. But we'll try to see what it can come out from there. Roger, you brought a group up from New York, from Jamaica, Queens. Tell us about that trip. It was a seven-hour trip. Our young people are very excited about giving back to community. And our union, which is in prizes at the Eastern Seaboard, they are excited. They planned this event where we were coming to Portland. And our young people would be the hands and feet of those who needed help. And so we're here this weekend for that. Why come all the way up to Portland, Maine, take a seven-hour drive instead of doing work in Jamaica? I'm sure you do work there, too. Yes, we do work there. But youth ministries allows our young people to get involved in every and anything. And just the idea of getting out of the city and giving back in another part of the world was exciting to a lot of our young people. So they came. What kind of work are they doing here today? Today, they're cleaning up around the Kennedy Park area. We have some over right now helping to prune up the grassberry beds with cultivate the community. And we have some others around the city working at the Red Cross, working up at some camps up in Freeport. So we have over about 50 kids here from New York City who are participating in different places. And what do they get out of this? What they get out of this is an opportunity to say, to be excited about giving back to the community and to know that they have been part of something bigger than their own community. And what I want them to get back is they can go back to their community, their local community, where they live and worship and do the very same thing. Tell us a little bit about the community policing organization here at the park. The community policing program in Kennedy Park is a Portland Police Department program. And Portland Housing has asked us to be in their neighborhood in an attempt to keep crime down. We are comprised of myself, the coordinator, and our senior lead officer, Jeffrey Drewan, who spends his time between East Bayside and Munjoy Hill working with the issues that have come up down here. We do a lot of crime prevention, landlord-tenant issues, and kind of do a little bit of everything down here. And what's the benefit of having an office like this in the community? It allows the community to have easy access to the police. We are very involved with the families and the kids specifically down here. And so we get to know them, we get to know the issues, and we are really able to do a lot of prevention work and outreach for the families. It brings the police department into their community. So we're a friendly face, and they're comfortable coming to talk to us. So instead of a barrier between the community and the police, there's more of a cooperative effort? Absolutely, yes. And what's your involvement in today's activities? So about two weeks ago, Bozia came to me and shared that he had some youth ministries that were interested in doing some volunteer work and asked if I thought Kennedy Park could use some help, and we said absolutely. So I helped organize all the areas that need some cleanup, reached out to the local providers, including Portland Housing Authority, Mainstay, Cultivating Community, and we all collaborated to get some muscle and TLC down here in Kennedy Park. So I really just tried to help bring it all together. We're here now with the Compassion Now rally. We're spread out all over the state, really. We've got about 13 or 14 different projects going on, just trying to share random acts of kindness and showing the light of God here in this local community. And what are they doing here at Kennedy Park? We're doing park cleanup right now, park beautification. We're helping with trash, removing shrubs and bushes, things that need to be taken care of. And how many people are involved in it? Right now, we have 900 people that registered for the event, and again, they're spread out all over the state. And talking about the project overall. The project overall, I think, is one that's geared towards for us anyways, is to take our religion and to make it a relationship and not just with God, but with our community and to get out and show people that we're people and we're here to help and we're here to make a difference.