 There's Hurricane Sandy, steam pipe explosions, building collapses, you name it, we responded to it, we are the city's bunker for all things emergency. So New York City Emergency Management, also known as NYSEM, was created in 1996. Right now you are standing in the 24-7 Operations Room. This is basically the city's 24-hour watch center where we monitor emergencies throughout the city's MI PD radios, FDMI radios, EMS CAD systems and any and all social media groups. Working with large-scale incidents throughout the city, we are a coordinating agency, so what we basically do is we'll send a responder out and we allow the incident commander on scene to focus on what they need to and we handle any outside agencies that are needed at that scene. And we notified the city of road closures, traffic and transit issues and emergency situations. A kind of turning point for me in my career here at NYSEM was the Brooklyn subway shooting that occurred. We started seeing 911 calls into the MI PD system. We were able to track exactly where patients were, where resources were needed, and facilitate messaging to go out to the public to make sure that people were safe and away from the area. When I was actually six weeks post part, I'm sitting at home as my lights were flickering during Sandy. With my newborn baby, my three-year-old and a radio, and I was listening and my team here handled that emergency like the champions that they are. And that is why I do what I do here today.