 You already came out of executive session. Right. We are ready to move forward. No action was taken. Oh, right. Nothing to report. Actually, we should have. No, I believe that this would be a time when we make the motion to make a motion duly seconded to take action consistent with the steps we discussed in executive session. I believe this will be exactly one of those times. OK. That's OK. Right? So you made that motion and I seconded it. Oh, OK. I outlined a motion. Right. Is there a motion? Yeah, there's a motion. Take action consistent. I move that we take action consistent with what? Steps outlined in the executive session. That's correct. And I'll second that. OK. All right. All in favor of the SII. OK. So this came up the other night and I'll just break it down. So we, I said this before, but we would sometimes very clearly announce what we agreed to do in the executive session, like when we're considering what pay increase to the profit. Once we've decided it's fully public, we need to come out and say we make this motion and it's really clear. Other times, even the things we decide to do in executive session cannot be public. And yet we have agreed to take some specific steps. Right. So if I'm understanding the counseling we've had upon us from our new attorneys, you guys are here so I have audience to explain all of this, then that's a time when we would say that we are taking action. But it's what we outlined in the executive session and that's the clue that we're not, that it's not appropriate to be shared part. Then it's a personal issue. It's a personal issue. And we went into executive session because it's a personnel issue. So in this circumstance, if you let us state, you don't disclose personnel issues. That's the reason I never did. So you're doing something we just don't know what it is. Right. And unfortunately, we have to keep it that way. Yeah, that's right. And when it's a personnel, we can't. No, we can't say anything. We can't. I think it's just kind of new to the townspeople that use this format or whatever you want to call it. Yeah, I hear what you're saying. Well, before we had as much issues, well, before we just would have said we have nothing to report. We always just said we have nothing to report. And sometimes we will still say that. If we are in a discussion and we have to hit pause on the discussion, then nothing's going to happen yet. Then we come out and say we have nothing to report. But if there's steps that we agree to take, then we do have emotions. Anyway, so thank you for being an audience for this next presentation. We're all starting to get in our heads around. We're happy to represent the entire public. We're going to have to be an entire public. You know, actually, I would really like you to continue that whole thing for a patuity. Can we do the shutters before we let's move it? Yeah, OK, so yeah, let's bring up the shutters. So it looks like we're ready for a motion to approve Grady Fair painting the town hall shutters. Well, we're going to end funding for it until we can discuss if that is going to be a motion. I think we are ready. We did discover that Grady did not paint these shutters. It was Tom Frost. And he was not a sub. I talked to him a little while ago. Talked to him again? Yeah, it was on behalf of the town. And I think it was when Scott Bassett was kind of organizing the painting. And Tom got paid. And he painted what he thought were all the shutters. So I'm not even sure where these shutters that weren't painted were at the time. Where did they come from? Well, we have some in storage. Yeah, they're the upstairs shutters. It's just that they've been sitting here for a while. And including the shutters for these windows, too, which I don't believe are all painted either. The smaller ones. Right. The smaller shutters. So that sounds familiar, actually, when you say Tom Frost painting shutters. That sounds familiar. Yeah, and when I went back to do an email search, I did find an email about Tom Frost painting shutters. All right, but I couldn't find any shutters. But I talked to Tom tonight. He doesn't want to paint these shutters. So I think he's got a health issue. So I think now we're back with Grady. So is it one motion or two? Do we know where the funding is coming from? The funding will come from the Town Hall Reserve Fund. OK, so it sounds like we can make one motion. Is there a motion to approve Grady Thayer's painting of Town Hall shutters with funding to come from the Town Hall Reserve Fund? Sure. And in an amount not to exceed, what did we say, 5,500? He said, I think it's less. We were talking about averaging it out to $400 for a shutter, plus the shutter that John has to repair. We found the missing big shutter. It's falling apart. Now in my garage. And John will repair it. Oh, he is going to repair it. Oh, yeah. So $400. That comes to $4,800. OK. $412 for shutters. But if one needs to buy materials and things like that, I have no idea what that's going to cost. Say a couple hundred bucks. Want to go to $5,000? Yeah. OK, so we need a motion to approve Grady Thayer's. Not to approve some shutters. Funding from the Town Hall Reserve Fund for painting and repair not to exceed $5,000. So moved. I'll second. Grady will be OK. We're going to make a motion. Denise is seconding any other questions or discussion? No. All in favor, we can say aye. Aye. Opposed to abstain. OK. Done. Done. Wow, the efficiency. Now, Alphana, joining us on the, I thought he was coming. You loved him, hasn't he? I did. I did. Yeah. I think this is Peter Brock we're talking about. Right. Yeah, the emergency. Do you have enough information to know what, I mean, I'm assuming the work is done, as they were doing it yesterday. But now, on the last page, issue this right of way. Thank you. Can we just go ahead and issue an ending out for us? No, because we need to know whether or not are the conditions on it. You know what? They say our spring is 100 feet away from the house on the opposite side of Baton Road. We all need to trench across the road to access the line that needs to be replaced. I just remember other ROWs, Alphana said, when they dig down so far, then they have to put the certain kind of material that we have to compact. And they have to compact it. And we want to know what that is. We can document it, because even though we had to process this on an emergency basis, we still want the permit, which will be recorded in the land records, to be great. Well, can we stake that in there? But we don't know what it is. So the backfill, the properly backfill according to the ROWs? It would be nice to know, but we should have a really kind of like watching. Right, I mean, it's really Alphana's responsibility to tell us what it is he needs to do. We don't have the ability to delegate anything to Alphana. Whether we do or don't, we have not delegated approval of the permit. No, no, I know. But it could be approved the permit subject to, not pending, subject to backfill, compaction, and other similar requirements as required by the road commission. The problem is that won't be in the right-of-way permit that we sign, right, it gets recorded in the land. Right, right, right, right. So the squishiness around words like properly or what was the other. We're just as required by the road commissioners. As required by the road commissioner, in six months a year, two years, nobody knows what was required, because we have a document. Well, we think that could easily be done. Yeah, but Alphana's system for getting done is for Alphana to be here and tell us so it's written down. Right, so we're not going to do it. To get Tancy, your quote, right, we're not going to do it. Until Alphana's here. And he can do the recie, and then this one at the same time. Can't stop them, yeah. I mean, I tried to get him. I tried to get him, but I just couldn't. No, this morning, yeah, I tried to get him. I loved him. Do you want to try calling him right now and asking what his conditions would be? Here, yeah, that's the only way. It's no service, I was hoping to see that. OK, so that's it. So the work's being done anyway. Well, it was already done probably yesterday. But because there's no, it's not holding them up. OK, great, that's all I'm talking about. But the documentation of exactly what Alphana was looking for in an emergency situation is what we need to document it really, really clear. And I agree with you, I mean, we can't do this. That's why I agree with that, and that's why. It's not holding them up, I'm sure it's done. I was going to send them an email today, but the worst comes to worst. They have to dig it up and replace it. All right, well, I know Alfred was there on Sunday to meet with them, because it was on his time card. Good, and then it was probably done. So we just need to have whatever he told them in writing on all their recordings. And this will be dealt with at our next meeting? Yeah, OK. Well, Q-doke, is there any other adjourn? Yeah, nothing else, much into adjourn. All favoritly sacked. Aye. Aye.