 All right, so this is supposed to be about finding balance, all right? It's between the balance is between the residents and the bar of the owners, all right? And we're worried about, you know, the maintenance issues that are, then the violence exacerbates all that stuff. You know, we don't like to come out of our homes and there's beer bottles in our yards, there's vomit, you know, I mean, okay, so I've had somebody throw up on our front porch because they're just sitting on our couch that's on the front porch. I've had somebody take Joe number two in the yard, you know, had people just go all the way to basically our backyard to go urinate, had people having, throwing out their condoms after having sex. Like, there's a lot of these maintenance issues and if we can take care of the maintenance issues, it will, you know, improve the quality of life for residents so much. And it can create, you know, some coexistence here. Now something I put together here is a timeline of what's going on here. And the goal is to get to 2024. I know we want immediate action and there are some immediate action items, but things are gonna take time to change. And the businesses agree that things are gonna change when a lot of these things get done. We've got, we've got Don Pitts and helping mitigate sound. He started March 1st, I believe he was hired. So he's gonna go into every, you know, bar and club that's having noise problems and go in there trying to figure out how to make it work with the bar and club and residents and educate people. We've got the more St. Mary's Business Association Agreement, all right. We've got 16 of 19 bars and clubs, I believe, have basically agreed to this, you know, changing some standards and having a minimum standards for operation over here to improve things for the neighborhood. I know there'll be some debate here whether they'll work or not, but these other things will, these all tie together. Okay, so we've got the parking study, we've got residential parking protection or just residential protections in general. We've got the bond complete, getting the bond completed, multi-family living projects that are gonna be completed and SAPD substation. So the whole list to get to, I believe, good is on the other side of 2024. It's just gonna take some patience. So this, I put this together. This is how this is gonna help balance out the neighborhood here. We have all these Tobin Hill initiatives. We've got the construction, we've got the North St. Mary's Business Association Agreement and getting residential protections. So with the bond construction and multi-family construction, and we've got the SAPD substation, these things are gonna improve the infrastructure of the neighborhood and it's gonna, with the significant increase in multi-family living businesses are gonna be less reliant on having cars come over here. You're not gonna need as much of a need for parking with a thousand plus new multi-family living apartment units here. Now, I know that's gonna arrange some people because that's also changing the dynamic of the neighborhood with that many multi-family living residences, but we're in a dense population. St. Antonio is growing faster than the housing, so that's just something that's, we can't change this. We people have to have somewhere to live. And with the construction, it'll also create a safer, more functional community for residents, business, pedestrian cyclists that, because having that substation there, the road making more sense and perhaps less traffic. These residential protections, we've got the parking study being done, Don Pitts and Mike Shannon facilitating the noise ordinance past doors, improving people's quality of life. Those improved parking protections for residents will reduce those maintenance issues and strengthen the North St. Mary's Business Association Agreement. So this agreement here is the most immediate action we have. And to tie into the parking study, also what Chief McManus proposed with the Barricades. Those things are something that we have going on right now and we gotta remember that a lot of this is tied to this construction getting done, that a lot of this is gonna improve the neighborhood. And I've talked with this Barn Club owners, business owners and they agree, they see the future, they see 2024 and they see how the neighborhood is gonna change and they're gonna change with the neighborhood.