 We were on the East Miramar C-Burn compound training for an ACM scenario that's assessment consequence management. We are trained to assess the area, see what the potential problem is, whether it's an explosion, fire or otherwise. And we have the tools and training to go in there and mitigate the hazard. It allows us all to expand our knowledge base because we all have different backgrounds. So what we're training here to do is to respond to a scenario where we find someone who has some sort of CBRNH in their toxic industrial material. These kind of training scenarios are so that we can get familiarity with our suits and get suit time and get more comfortable being in our suits and operating our gear since it's a very perishable skill. The skill with operating in suits and operating all of our technology, it's a really technical skill. And if you don't do it very often, it'll go, it'll just disappear. This training is important to the Marine Corps because if you don't have Marines or personnel trained in order to handle these types of situations, which are the most dangerous types of situations possible, everything out there will kill you or severely wound you permanently. Nobody will know what to do, everybody will scatter and chaos will ensue.