 Now, the E4C Fellowship is only possible with the generous support of funders like the Siegel Family Endowment, whose perspectives encompass not a single program or project, but an entire ecosystem. Joining us now is Katie Knight, the executive director of Siegel Family Endowment, a foundation focused on understanding and shaping the impact of technology on society. Katie joined SFV in 2017 as deputy executive director and brings a diverse range of professional experience to the role drawn from her previous endeavors in education, technology, and community-based organizations. Before joining SFV, Katie worked on community engagement at Financial Sciences Company, Two Sigma. Her earlier career includes several years of Google spent working in various capacities, most notably on the public affairs team. Before that, she held roles in nonprofit development and real estate. She's deeply passionate about the power of local politics and civic engagement, and previously served on her local community board in Queens, New York, earning recognition in 2015 as a 40 under 40 rising star in city and state for her work there and at Google. She currently serves as a member of the advisory council of Realliance, I know I see nonprofit whose dual impact improves early literacy outcomes for elementary school students, while also helping young people build early career skills, as well as on the board of CS for all, the national movement to bring high quality computer science education to all students. Katie, it's my pleasure to welcome you to the virtual stage. Thank you very much. I'm really delighted to be here to represent SFV. As you mentioned, we're a foundation focused on the impact of technology on society, and I often say that's true for better or for worse. There's incredible potential in technology and also some harms to mitigate. We invest in organizations that are engaged in learning workforce and what we call multi dimensional infrastructure, which recognizes the interdependence between infrastructures physical digital and social dimensions. As some people may already know, last month we announced an investment in the engineering for change research fellowship, and starting next spring will fund five E for C fellows to perform cross sector research and conduct a longitudinal impact evaluation of the program. In other words, not only do we want to fund the fellows who, as we just saw are doing incredible work. We're also interested in studying how the fellowship experience affects both their longer term career paths, as well as their impact on the innovators, entrepreneurs and nonprofit organizations that they've worked with. I'm sure we all can agree that infrastructure influences everything in society. And if we're going to solve the most pressing challenges of our age, whether they are systemic racial and other inequalities, climate change or the myriad challenges we face, we need a better way of designing our infrastructure for us at Segal infrastructure isn't just about building things. It's equally about the processes that shape the things that we build. We're really inspired by how E for C fellows work directly with communities to develop responsive and sustainable infrastructure and believe that this approach will unlock greater more equitable impact across multiple dimensions. Our mission aligns really closely with the goals of the E for C research fellowship program, and we're excited to collaborate with you all on this important work to and to advance multi dimensional engineering for the benefit of humanity. We hope that our involvement will encourage others to consider joining us in support of the E for C fellowship, and the work of asking me more broadly to foster greater opportunity for young researchers, and to make their innovative solutions more widely available to underserved communities worldwide. Thank you for including Segal endowment in your impact engineer 2021 and for all of the work that you're doing to empower the next generation of engineers who will build a better future for all of us back over to you. Thank you, Katie for sharing your insights and for working with us to build the human infrastructure that will shape the future. We're really excited to do this together.