 Well, the incident continues to escalate. Every effort is being made to contend the funds. In addition to that, OES is deploying resources down to San Diego to assist in recovery efforts. All of a sudden this week we have the weather that we were predicting and the conditions that we were afraid of happen. We have a robust mutual aid system in the state of California. If the incident continues to grow, or if there's multiple incidents like we saw in San Diego this week where they have multiple fires going simultaneously, then the region eventually, as the region runs out of equipment to send, and then they reach out to us. As needs are identified, those needs will gravitate up that chain of succession until they are met by whatever resources are needed. Most of we deal with fire engines of all types, water tenders of all types, and we call overhead. Those strike teams will be composed of various resources to address those incidents. They'll have fire engines with them, they'll have ground crews, they may have liaisons with air resources. Those are composed by the fire personnel on scene and coordinated through the fire engine and command posts. Typically we don't see these type of conditions until later in the year. So I think the citizens of California need to understand that this is a wake-up call.