 And I think what historic preservation can do in particular is to kind of uncover these lost histories of these immigrant communities and I think it's particularly interesting even with these difficult histories that the US has gone through in the last hundred or so years to kind of help to grapple with these pasts, whether it's to preserve or conserve a certain building that can tell a certain story or to even like uncover oral histories in various communities. We work in Southern California where there's a very broad base of residents who come from all different backgrounds and places and I really think that with resources to address diverse needs and more tools and practical workbook type resources for people of all backgrounds and all levels of accessibility we could have great resources to reach those people. I think the field of historic preservation could evolve over the next fifty years by being inclusive of diverse populations where historic preservation has generally not been serving and kind of creating a holistic development process to include multiple places in that development. The work I do is focused on the most disenfranchised marginalized populations in the city of Chicago and their inability to participate in any kind of discourse about what happens in places where they live is just so devastating in its impact that to begin to correct that and to create processes that address that would be hugely beneficial for both diagnostic purposes and relationship building purposes. So I really have come away with a vision of preservation as much or more a process and a rejuvenating process not only for cities and other settings but rejuvenating for democratic process participation and engagement.