 Well, Governor Tom Wolf hit the road to pitch his budget proposal. Schools that teach tour across the Commonwealth. Wolf wants to increase school funding by $2 billion over the next four years. We cannot continue to disinvest in our education system. This is our future. Pennsylvania ranks 45th in terms of state support for education. That doesn't make any sense. We could actually do something to close the gap. We sit on top of one of the richest deposits of natural gas in the world. We're the only state with natural resources without a severance tax. Texas does it. Oklahoma does it. North Dakota does it. Alaska, Louisiana, West Virginia does it. I'm proposing that we do it. For the past few years, we've faced a deficit and those are very, very difficult decisions. We only have one librarian for eight elementary schools. Some of our places are in the 30s. They did not replace positions, special education, music, art, teachers. We definitely don't have the technology pieces that we could. My biggest concern is to make sure that we maintain our relevancy for our students, to make sure they're either college or career ready. We've got to make sure that we're doing what we can for our children. A severance tax would raise a billion dollars in the first full year. A billion new dollars coming into our schools, our education system. And listening to some of the things that he wants to do for education, I became excited. We're really excited about more preschool learning. We're very excited about the governor's commitment to community colleges. To tour the state, to see what's going on at different districts is a really prudent thing to do. That he's actually came down into the trenches to see what's going on. It's very important. We need to focus on education. We need to make sure that we are invested in something that means so much to our future. Let me hear it. This was really nice of you. Susan, thank you for the tour. See, some things don't change.