 All righty, it is 5.30, I'm gonna call the meeting to order. I'll start out with a roll call. Alder Rust. Present. Alder Raimi. Here. Alder Heidemann. Here. I am Alder Becker and I am here and Alder Salazar is excused. We'll start out with a point of view. What allegiance is due to the flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. Okay, we have some new people. We have someone here. I think we'll also move quick introductions. I'm the Decker Chair of the Public Works Committee. I am Alder District 6, Alder Person. Alder and Heidemann, 10th District, South Side of Sheboygan. I am Angela Raimi. I am District 5, Alder. Okay, now I'm Geary Tulfiner. I'm voicing my complaint on a newly planted tree. I'm Zach Rust, Vice-Chair, District 8. Okay. Casey Bradley, City Administrator. Joel Colesty, DPW Street Department. Tim Bol, DPW Parks and Forestry. Joel Curlin, DPW Parks and Forestry. Stacy Wesseljag, Administrative Clerk. Heather Burke, Business Manager. David Peeble, Director of Public Works. Okay, thank you. We'll start with item number five, Approval Minutes, October 10th, 2023. I move to approve. Second. I motion a second. Any discussion on those minutes? All in favor? Aye. Can you pose? Chair votes aye. Those are approved. Okay, item number six, Communication from Geary Tulfiner. Yeah, it would be me. Okay. I think we'll hear from you, sir, first, if you want to just give a quick, but I ask that you keep it brief and on topic. Okay. I had a tree removed. There was, I have a date on the, hang on, May 24th of 2022. And here's a picture of the stump removal. Okay. And at that time, when I talked to Tim, he asked me if I wanted another tree in replacement. And I distinctly recall what I said. Absolutely not. So that was the end of discussion. The next day they came and they removed the tree. So I just got back from Ireland, but like three weeks ago, I contacted Tim and there was a notice on my door saying that there was going to be a tree planted. And I said, what happened with the discussion that I didn't want, what? Okay. So I never heard back, never heard back. And I will back up because the neighbor across the street, Marlene Lacing, she had a tree replaced, are cut down as well. And she was asked if she wanted another tree in replacement. And she said, no. Well, unfortunately she passed away last year, but the neighbor across the street that does Cliff Schlegel that lives on the corner, Riverdale and Gray Fox Drive, he distinctly recalls her stating that she did not need a tree replanted, just like what I was told from you. So anyways, I come back from my vacation and here's my newly planted tree. And you can see, I mean, I try to make it as large as I could, but look where the location of this tree is. I mean, did they just drop the coin and plant it? Look where the other one was planted. Unfortunately, the three of us, Cliff Schlegel, myself and Jeff Tim have underground sprinkling systems. Okay. So you can see, here's another proof. I mean, how much difference where the new tree is planted compared to the other ones that I have on my property. So, okay. And I go down Riverdale Avenue and here's a freshly planted tree. Look how close it is to the curb. Okay. So those trees on Gray Fox Court, that subdivision is 20-some years old. And if the person that would have been the proper one to be speaking Cliff Schlegel, him and his wife say that we got the bottom of the barrel with the trees. Now, this is just each time we get a little wind. This is the debris that comes off those trees. We have no city sidewalks. We have no street lights. We, I swear, every house owner, if they don't have one dog, they got two dogs. And they're walking their dogs and children I've seen because I live right on the corner. I have my living room chair is right by the window. So I see everything that goes by on Gray Fox Drive and Gray Fox Court. So they're walking at nine, even I even seen as late as 10 o'clock at night. Now, someone's gonna get hurt. I mean, it's as simple as that. I mean, we got Jackson School, that's just not even a mile away. So I mean, you have to do something with those trees. And that's why I contacted you. I couldn't even as much as take my garbage out on Fridays because the tree limbs were so low that every time the garbage truck came, I had nothing but a mess. And I was sick of cleaning the crap up. And I mean, I'm paying almost $5,000 and I just got assessed, I mean, $60,000 with no improvement. And I should have to clean that stuff up in front of my property. I don't think that that's fair. So I have a solution to that. Right over on the south side of Jeff Tim's driveway, which is not his property, is a tree stump that's still in the ground. Take my tree and put it over there because I do not want that tree. Like I say, I feel that you damaged the underground sprinkling system by planting that tree there. And I will not know until the guy comes in spring. So, and the other thing is those trees are so old that Jeff Tim, which the other man got an email from, those tree roots are coming out of the ground that he had to call the sprinkling system guy and he had to cut away some of the roots and then reconnect the line for the water. So you guys got to do something with those trees. I mean, when I can't even take out my garbage, I mean, it did get corrected after I called you. And, but it wouldn't have, if I went to went out there and I said, well, what about on Grey Fox Court? He says, well, that isn't on our schedule. Mrs. Schlagel came out and she says, I need this trimmed here too. She says, we can't even cut the grass. That's not on her schedule. So, and I'm there seven years now and I know one time I seen an outside concern. I don't know the name of it, but it was orange trucks that they come to the cities and they trim. So I saw that one time. And now this is the second time now in the seven years that something has been done with our trees and it's unacceptable. Not when you're paying that kind of money and like they say, safety concerns, I mean, like that. When you have children going to school and city residents walking their dogs and stuff. And I did hear people fall and cry. I'm not running out there. That's not my responsibility. So that's what I have to say. And the Aldermen's has a communication from Jeff Tim complaining as well. I've already forwarded that through David. I just talked to him about it. So that's in the process. I'll answer that email to Jeff Tim. Okay, let's jump ahead. Thank you. So Gary, thank you very much for using the city's process of appealing this tree. That's why it's in there for people that have concerns to bring this to this committee. So little background. We did a brand new tree management for the city in 2016. And the ash tree was just, the ash borer was just found at that time. So it has happened at a really good time to make a new management plan for the city. So part of that was we need to get back to planting trees. The goal, because for quite a while we weren't planting trees we were just removing 500 plus trees a year. So the goal was to get back to plant trees in our cities again where the sites are needed. The goal is to have street lined trees tree, street lined trees along our streets. Okay, that's the goal. At the time of that management plan we did a tree study with the costs. What our tree line, what our trees are providing our city. And that was well over $3 million a year. That takes into effect beauty but economical values, mostly what it's doing for the actual city. So we feel that we've been the longest running tree, city tree USA in Wisconsin. That's something we've always wanted to keep up. When we started planting again, that was a big question Gary was really was what about people that don't want trees? Well, if we start honoring that to everybody that doesn't want a tree there's gonna be a lot of holes in that. So we're gonna have trees, no trees, trees, no trees. It's gonna, ultimately it's gonna make a lot of more work that shouldn't really be the factor is we want tree aligned streets. So I'm gonna let our city forester talk a little bit more about how he remembers the conversation going because I would have to back Mr. Boll up here that he would never say, okay, we will never plant a tree here because that hasn't been our policy. So at this time I'm gonna turn it over to Tim to talk a little bit about that. I'm just gonna interrupt one second. This is our turn, please sir, you're done. Sir, this is our turn to talk a little bit about that. I do want to say this is the first hearing about the placement. So that could have been talked about, we would have been receptive to talking about that, but this is the first time hearing about placement. Thanks Joe. And going off the placement thing, if the tree's too far from the curb, we can move it closer to the curb if that's what you desire. And if your sprinkler system got damaged, I don't think it would have been because my crew would have told me if they would have hit it, but if it is, we'll take care of it. But you wouldn't know because it shut off already. I'm saying in the spring when you turn it on, then you'll know, then you can let me know. But going off, what our conversation is, which I get, you know, you don't want a tree and I get, you wouldn't believe how many people don't want trees. Almost, I ask for tree requests quite often and I never get enough to fill a quart of trees that I need to plant. So then I'll often fill streets as, you know, if this guy requests one, then I'll fill the remainder of the street if it's an appropriate spot. You know, sometimes we're cutting down trees where it's not appropriate to replace because it's too close to the driveway, too close to streetlight, too close to, you know, something, maybe there's overhead power lines, maybe something just isn't right about the spot that there shouldn't be a new tree. But in appropriate tree spots, like the one on your property, or adjacent to your property, I was asking you in 2022, if you'd like a tree planted in 2022 is I was still looking for vacancies to plant that fall? And you told me, no. So I said, okay, I won't plant one in 2022. And I always reserve the right to come back and plant one. It's just that you didn't request one. I was asking if you'd like to request one and you didn't want to request one. But as you can see, or you probably noticed we planted probably a dozen or 16 or so trees in your neighborhood this fall. And that's why it made sense to put one in front of your house because we were already there planting other trees right next door, you know, or within the same area. So that's what I tell everybody as far as they don't want a tree, you know, if it's an appropriate spot, you know, if I'm not, I'll say, hey, okay, I won't go out of my way to plant one for you there right away this year. But I'll reserve the right when we're in the area and it makes sense for the crew to be efficient to fill a box of trees, then that time will come. I think that's all I have. Thank you, Tim. Any comments from our committee members? Go ahead, John. Thank you, Chairman. Okay, the fact that that tree was planted, he had numbered, he said, first one was 20 inches, now it's 79 inches. Is that ordinary where you stagger those trees in the tree line, is that the pattern that you're looking at or was it just put in the wrong place? Well, yeah, again, that's the first time I'm hearing about the distance problem, but sometimes you'll get to a street where, you know, we own quite a bit of the right-of-way, you know, we own quite a bit. And the existing trees, like the ones on his area, they're pretty large trees and they're planted pretty close to the curb. So the idea is to get a little bit farther back to give the tree a little more space to grow. So it's not that we're trying to stagger, we're trying to put it out of the way. It's just more so, I wish those other ones were farther out. So if we're gonna start planting new trees, we should plant them in the right spot, you know, right tree in the right spot. So that's kind of the goal. And having here, it has 100 trees. When the wind blows, I pick up branches. That's automatic. And again, it's something I do not on a daily basis, but every week. So the fact that you have branched from, is it, are the trees that were planted there before, the ones that are there 20 years? Yes. Are they just bad? Are they just, they just lose the branches real easy? Or is it the majority of them are home trees near ourselves and linens? Okay. And elms especially, they'll have lower dead wood that sheds itself quite often. Okay. Just natural with the tree as it gets more mature, the bottom branches get jaded out and shed themselves. And the lindens grow really fast, like weeds. So when the trucks hit them, they're losing branches. So it's fairly common to have branches in the street like that, like the picture you showed. The linden trees, they probably need to be pruned every five years to actually keep up with their maintenance, because they grow so fast. But we're unable to do that with our manpower. Right. No, I understand. That's pretty much impossible to do. The other thing that I have, I guess putting a tree where a taxpayer doesn't want a tree, though it sounds like a great idea, even if that tree to me was removed and I drove through the area, you'd still have a tree lined street if that tree wasn't there. I mean, there's, I mean, you looked on the street and you'd say, but there's a line of trees there and it looks very nice and it's a beautiful neighborhood. So I don't know if the purpose is to try to find another place for that tree, which would be nice. But again, you have a policy that says, hey, if we plant it, it stays there. The taxpayer, the property owner, doesn't have, can't say, I don't want that tree and you're gonna take that tree out. Is that fair to the taxpayer? What? I mean, with what we're trying to achieve, I really think it is. I disagree. You know, if you're trying to achieve a certain effect for the city, we stop, if we start, first of all, they have this amendment process. So this is what is available to them. But like Timmy alluded to before, just because people have to pick up some branches, you're gonna get people that don't want a tree. Well, okay, if it goes the way that we're gonna move that tree and other people hear that, you're gonna have a lot of more people coming to this committee and saying, I don't want a tree in front of my house. It raised my sidewalk, it makes a mess. I got to clean up after it. Well, then maybe we need to sit down at the table. If that's the route we're gonna go and figure out a new policy for our urban forest. A couple of quick questions. What is the right-of-way measurement from the curb approximately in that area? Is it varies from different? It varies in every street. We could get a rough estimate, not on that map, but it's fairly wide there. Okay, so that tree's approximately six feet in. It's more than that. I mean, we can follow up on that. I'm confident. It's 79 inches right from where it's planted now to the start of my grass by the curb. And the other one was 29, so that's quite a difference. And it wouldn't be very challenging for us to shift the tree closer. Maybe 20 inches or something if that would calm this. This is the first time hearing that that's been the issue. I just got back to application. I mean, like I say, I had no knowledge that you, you know what I'm saying? I would have stopped it if I would have been, oh, I would have blocked it. But unfortunately, I mean, I was in Ireland and I come home and all of a sudden I see a tree there. And that just, like you say, if it would have been in the same spot as the original one was, as you can see, that would be a different story. Great. I was gonna just ask, what species of tree is the one that's in there? I believe it's a Zelkova, which is in the family of an elm. So it's similar to its neighboring trees. It's not exactly the same. Absolutely. Yeah, that's awesome. I mean, if just moving it is the issue, then I think we should definitely move it. I still have a few more things to say. I'm the mindset that the way we are fostering our community, and I completely agree. We want to have a shaded, beautiful community of tree-lined streets. I also think about not necessarily you, even though you are the current owner, but I think about how long trees take to grow and think about the future of that neighborhood and who would be living in there in the future. And that's, you're making decisions for that as well. But now hearing that it's, if the main concern is where it's placed in the yard, then I'm hearing that you said that you can move it. The other thing I want to say though, too, is concern about just maybe future planting of, if we're planting trees that we cannot keep up with and trimming, then I think we need to really look at that. I agree with you 100%. You cannot have trees that are 20-some years old and if you don't have the manpower, that isn't our taxpayers. I mean, I'm paying over $5,000 a year. No sidewalks, no street lights. The police department doesn't even know that we're in the city. So I mean, come on, let's do something about this situation. I mean, even the city clerk, Meredith, she said, she lived, I don't know if she didn't say where she lives, but she said she lives in the south side and she says there's no sidewalk or nothing either. And she said, and I showed her, she says, I totally agree with you. She says, something's gotta be done. I mean, because, yeah, sure you're always gonna be cleaning up here and there, but these trees are the bottom of the barrel trees and they need to be trimmed, especially if you have no sidewalks. That's what I'm getting at. You have no sidewalks, so people are walking in the streets. That's where I'm getting at. Okay, you've heard that argument, sir. You've heard that argument, just when we keep it on track, we don't even like that. As far as the sidewalks in the neighborhood, that's how that neighborhood was designed. That's, I mean, if director be blowing, maybe you didn't talk about that, as far as, you know, that's the way that, that's how it was designed for, you know, there's certain areas of the city that don't have sidewalks in their choice. Choice of that neighborhood is basically not to have sidewalks. I wouldn't be my choice for a neighborhood. I'm not complaining about the sidewalk. Which is the house that was the way it was, and that's the place that, so let's take that out of the discussion then, sir, and go back to what the tree, the tree that's planted would not be, have this issue probably when it gets older, because it's a different style of tree, I imagine. He alluded to being the bottom of the barrel, these other trees, that's not, this is a more desirable, all the trees that are there, that everyone is complaining that they're the bottom of the barrel. I mean, and every- But that is not what we're talking about, your tree server, and that's what we're gonna keep it on that discussion of the tree that is there. Okay, that's fine. We're not talking about the other trees in the neighborhood. But as you can see on this picture, there's other trees that are there, so removing that tree, I'm not replacing it, would be just sufficient for me. Well, again, but then when those trees are gone, this, that there's a balance to that, there's a balance, your trees go, that if your tree starts growing and grows bigger, those trees get age out and die now. So we're keeping large trees in the neighborhood all along. That's the, I guess the goal, you know, because that's what happens. I'll be honest with you, I wish that was on my street, because my street had all ash, so they're all gone. So all we have is little trees now. I wish we had a couple of bigger trees in our neighborhood, because we have nothing anymore, because, and that's not to the forestry department's problem issue, that is just nature. We ended up with ash trees and that didn't go so well. And so, and I believe that that's one of the things that are one of our goals is, is to not have that problem in the future. That's why Tim is mixing them up. He's not putting all ash trees on a street anymore, or all lindens or all elms, they're mixing it up, so there is a thing. I mean, so I guess, I don't do any other comments from- What? Oh, I was just gonna say, the village of Kohler, they have a selection of trees to be planted if a tree is cut down or diseased or whatever. I mean, I had, like I said, had no say so in the matter, and where that's planted. I am totally against that. I don't want that tree that close to my house. I'm looking for, for our committee members, any of them have any discussions? I think if we can move the tree, then let's just move the tree. So do we need a motion to do that? We already have somebody to put a motion through. I move to move the tree to the original spot that would, for the tree that was taken down in 2022. I'll second. Okay, a motion and second, is there any other discussion on that? Go ahead. Just one comment. You made the comment that you'll go back and fix the water line if it's broke. Right, I mean- The water line, if that's properly installed, should not be in our right away. You're, that is correct. It might be in our right away, right? So I don't know that we would be on the hook to go fix that, so. Okay. I'd like that- We've actually ran into that before and you're correct. We really wouldn't be because it would be in the right away. Correct. So before you move it, document where it's at, and then in the spring, if it is, and we do find that we crossed over the right away, then we would be liable and look at that. But if that was installed in the right away, we shouldn't be fixing stuff that shouldn't be there. Go ahead. Isn't there a process that that, the person that's installing that water line, don't they have to go to the city and say, where is the lot line? How can they put that in? They just can't run that through our right away. If they're out there doing it, I don't understand how somebody would get away with that. They're supposed to. They're supposed to. Well, I mean, I don't know why I'm doing that. That house was built in 1999. So, all right. Any other discussion? All in favor? Aye. Any opposed? Chair votes aye. Prove the tree was removed. All right. Thank you very much. All right. We'll go on to number seven. General Ordinance, number 27, 2324. Ordinance related to one way streets, parking restrictions in the area bounded by South 19th Street, Indiana Avenue, South 24th Street to Georgia Avenue. I'm very familiar with this. Do you want me to take this? Thank you. Thank you. Like, Mr. Chairman, as you know. Due to the construction on the Indiana Avenue, the 24th Street through 19th Street were made into two-way streets temporarily for the reconstruction, for the reconstruction to try to alleviate traffic concerns and stuff like that. As is the construction is almost completed on the Indiana Avenue. When that completion is, we would like those streets returned to the one-way designations they were. Any other questions on that? Okay. Motion to approve. Okay. Second. Seconded. All those in favor? Aye. Are any opposed? Chair votes aye. That is approved. Okay. Number eight. Resolution number 84, 2324. Resolution adopted. I think a facility fee schedule and equipment fee schedule like here at our door. I think, yeah. Well, I think we can, as a team, we can take this department. I think as you know, we've been working with the city attorney's office. We've been updating our ordinances. And one of the things for especially like special events was actually adopting a fee schedule versus every fee for every ordinance. This way it's a schedule and then we can do it as part of the committee and adopt it. One of the things that is in front of you tonight is there's a change. Basically it's bleachers and we do occasionally get for special events, requests for bleachers to be moved. The very cumbersome and difficult they take quite a bit of effort. And right now it's only $50 is the charge. It hasn't been updated for several years. The changes we're saying it should be a hundred. If it's that large of event and they're requiring bleachers, we feel that this is not an exorbitant price to ask to have bleachers move from one area of our park system to a whole other different park somewhere else in the city. Now it's the first change. The second is is a new charge that we really haven't charged for special events or parades, for instance, and it's barricade requests. And we get quite a bit of events or runs, for instance, that will require barricades to be set up. So the streets department, along with the parks department, we collect them, we'll take them out, set them out the night before. Sometimes our personnel is there setting them up the next day. Or depending if it's a smaller event, we work with the event organizers to deploy the barricades. But we still have to deliver them. And then the next time when the event's over, they put them back, let's say in the corner and then we'll pick them up. So what you see is a fee schedule per barricade, like a type two barricade. We're saying for every type two barricade, it's a $5 charge. One with a flasher, if it's gonna be out overnight and you need to have a beacon on it, it's $7 because it's an extra piece of equipment on the barricade. Type three barricades are the larger barricades that have the three bars. Those are usually set up to actually block a road off. Those are $15 larger and they also have legs that have to be disassembled and attached in the field. So it takes a little longer time. And again, a little bit of upcharge if they have overnight with the flasher. So again, sometimes we'll get as well requests for no parking. So we'll put out no parking, police order, signs in advance for a temporary event to keep cars from parking in the area. Those signs, they take a little extra time, they have to be pounded in. We don't like to encourage events to remove parking off of public streets in other words. So those are $20. That's the additions to our fee schedule that have not been charged in the past. Overall, just trying to add this is part of our overall fees. This would go in line with our other equipment such as picnic tables that we deliver, benches, a grill for instance, a stage, can you help me if I'm forgetting? Dance floor, we have the dance floor we'll deliver. So all sorts of different types of equipment for special events and these are the newest ones. So we're asking for your support and approval and to adopt this as part of our fee schedule. We'll be forward. This would be starting in 24. Okay, I guess we'll go first. Go ahead Joe. Okay, I'll go first. Okay, that's fine. I have a couple of questions. And this is just my ignorance. Where are the bleachers? You have bleachers in storage and when people request them for events? We have a few bleachers that we have in the back of our facility in our yard, as well as at some locations, for instance, Kiwanis Park, we'll have throughout the park. We'll actually go like all the different areas to bring them. How often do you all do that? Not that often. But it does take two people. Oh, I'm sure. Oh, does it sound like fun? The other question is for these fees, is it per, so $20 per sign, $5 per barricade? It would be $20 for the block. For the block, okay. If you were having a block party and you wanted to put these signs out ahead of the block party, so no one parks along that block, we would charge $20. So it could be five signs, it could be three, it could be eight, it depends on the length. Oh, by city blocks needed, I could have read. And then is this, is there, is this flat fee or is that any, is there any, would you have any wiggle room for non-profit organizations or is there room for negotiation if need be? I'm just thinking about really small nonprofits where every dollar counts. We get that request all the time. And if it's a real hardship, we would bring it to this committee for a year. Because if we start picking and choosing within our office, Heather and her staff would, yeah. It's a daily occurrence with nonprofits. Man, we love to support, but we also have to balance. Totally. The other park needs versus so. Right? My final question is, is this gonna be integrated? I know we're trying to make it much easier, right? For planning events and getting all of those things. This is gonna be nicely integrated into that plan. That's part of the purpose of bringing it. Totally. And getting this approved. That is all my question. Okay, thanks. Nice job. Thanks. Okay, so the no parking, that's the block. Is that fit with police requirements to having assigned, so if you're gonna have no parking for a hundred yards or whatever it is, you have to have assigned every 15 feet or whatever. Yeah, we typically will try to follow the parking regulations. Usually it's at the beginning of the block and then somewhere mid block along that section. So depending upon the length, we may add a sign or two here and there, but it's typically at the beginning of a block, no parking for the section, and then another one, like I said, mid block. And then if it's a little bit long, we'll add another one. But again, it's a temporary no parking. Right. But in these situations that still, it's neighbors, you know, with the neighbors trying to help, hey, everyone we're gonna be doing this heads up, they'll be putting out signs. A lot of cases it will be, let's say if it's, in some cases, it's for construction purposes. If there's gonna be construction activity, the company will say with a property owner, hey, I have a crane coming in or I have an excavator or some type of equipment that needs to be, this space needs to be occupied, we'll put the signs up for that in advance. Okay. And my other question is, since you're changing these fees, and you I'm sure somewhere have a list of all the people that have requested barricades and throughout the years or within the last year, are they gonna get mail a copy of that schedule so that when they go in the planning, they go, okay, you know, the city raised their fees, so we're gonna need more money or like I said, or we're gonna need to go, because we couldn't afford them last time, now we really can't afford them, and then they have an opportunity, because you must have a data bank of non-profits and clubs that have done that. Heather and the office have like the special events, and a lot of that has been communicated in terms of, here's your contract for your special event in advance, because they get, they actually get actually a kind of a form because they get reserved in the system, and I'm kind of looking at Heather to correct me if I make any assumptions wrong. You're good. You're good. You're good. They get a copy, so they're already pre-populated before the general public has access, so a lot of those larger and more community events are already pre-populated for 2024. Gotcha, okay. And Heather and her office and the team have been communicating, we're going to more online, so that's helping with the process as well. Okay. And to stand upon that, we would notify the ones that this would apply to, so that they would have a heads up well before the 2024, and we traditionally invoice for equipment following January of the year to kind of fall in line for budget cycles and everything so that they have a heads up of how much the fee is going to be, and then time to get that together. That's fantastic. Good job. Great. I won't ask me to come. I think that these fees are reasonable, and I don't think that they're out of line at all. I think, you know, in some cases, I mean, we actually are under what we should be, but that's my comment on it. Any other comments? No, no, that's very good. Okay, I'll close the promotion then. I move to accept the resolution. Second. Okay. I actually made the second. Any other discussion? All in favor? Aye. Any opposed? Chair votes aye. That is approved. Okay. We are at number nine. Next meeting date is November 14th, 2020. Seeing as we exhausted the data, I move the promotion to adjourn. I move to adjourn. Second. All in favor? Aye. Opposed? For votes aye. We are adjourned. Thank you, everyone. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.