 Chairman, I'll recognize this Mr. McKeechin for five minutes. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and to you and the Chairman Paloma, thank you for convening today's hearing. Mr. Geis, I'd like to start off with you and just note that when we did the development of wired broadband services in rural communities, we found that it was critical to ensure that we knew what areas are served and what areas are not. And that's why I was privileged to help with the passage of the Broadband Data Act last Congress, which attempted to help improve how we collect data from wireline providers for our broadband maps. But as you know, it's a little trickier with wireless providers. How do we make sure that we have accurate maps of which wireless providers serve which areas and why is it important to get it right? Thank you Congressman McKeechin for the question and thank you for your leadership on trying to secure support for devices so that we can get folks in our low-income communities connected. We'll continue that work. The mapping question is a really good question. When we talk about wireless mapping, it is different and more difficult than a wireline map. Unfortunately, too often our maps have relied on sort of the theoretical propagation characteristics, which leaves a lot of communities unserved but reported as served. As we look at the rollout of 5G and the small cell technology that that technology relies on, it's going to be critical that we get that information right because the opportunities to miss communities in our urban sectors as well as communities in our rural sector are just vastly increased. So let's take a look at the actual technical opportunities, but also let's make certain that the crowdsourcing of data that we present as an opportunity to challenge those maps is available to consumers as well. So it can't be just a state-led effort. It can't be just a professional effort. We need true crowdsourcing because the opportunity for these technologies to miss communities are pretty great.