 Well, it was March 5 of 2012 when the Secretary of the Navy, C&O, McPon, Commandant of the Marine Corps, and the Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps stood together in the hangar bay of the USS Bataan and rolled out the 21st Century Sailor and Marine Program. And it was built on this premise that we knew 10 years into the longest sustained combat operations in American history, and with the then freshly rolled out national strategy that was about the rebalance to the Asia Pacific, and that by any objective analysis was a sea service-centric strategy that was based on the Navy Marine Corps. We also knew that we'd be down one carrier when Enterprise retired, and we waited for the Ford class carrier to come on board, to come up into the force. So we knew that the operational temple that our folks had experienced over the last 10 years was likely to stay exactly the same if not be heightened. And that's why what led to this program. Now, a year later, as we stare down sequestration, that impact and that need for an operational temple has only been heightened and multiplied exponentially. We've seen the historically short turnarounds of on the east coast of the Eisenhower on the west coast of Stennis. The Marine returned to their amphibious routes. Now more Marines aboard Navy ships than there are boots on the ground in Afghanistan. And with one carrier tied up pier side, the Truman knot on the east coast. The need for support programs to ensure our folks have the tools they and their families need to succeed and excel in the coming decade has never been more important.