 Most of you know me. I'm Jim Frazier. I'm superintendent of Brown County Educational Service Center. About three years ago, Judge Koss Swiler asked me to launch and we had a conversation and belief at that time he said 75-80% of his caseload was related to drugs. The caseloads were increasing. Everjage of my offenders was going down. We all know how many unit doses of opioid medication was doled out to our citizens in this county, which allowed for this abuse and then they're sitting in front of me. The typical overdose death, Brown County being one of the highest in the state of Ohio and Ohio being one of the highest rates in the nation, is a white male in their 20s. I blew me away. I was like, I thought that was something that happened down in the inner city. Our poverty, our drug abuse, our crime is spread out in rural areas as it's hidden by cornfields and soybean fields and cattle and hogs. We've developed a Brown County drug task force putting mentors into the schools. If you can instill in a youth the fact that they need to think about what their future holds for them, then they have a purpose. They have hope. The initial grant was based on students who received either free or reduced lunch, kind of years toward the idea that they are a little bit more needy. And then we just basically wanted to put another positive influence in their life to help them because sometimes we consider them to be at-risk students that they might not complete high school, that they might not go on to a technical program or a college program. Your influence, I know, has made a difference from the surveys that I have seen. The kids have really appreciated all of you coming in and being a part of this.