 We're conducting a full-scale exercise involving a hazardous material incident that occurs at an outdoor special event with a large crowd of people. And that requires the response of local emergency responders from the city of Oklahoma City and then requires an interface with the 63rd Civil Support Team. If this was a real-world, large-scale public event, we would likely have engaged the 63rd Civil Support Team to be part of our public safety and security operations and would work underneath our Weapons of Mass Destruction Group. They bring to the table capabilities that we don't have, especially with regards to analyzing the environment and identifying the type of hazards that we might deal with, as well as being subject matter experts who can guide us on what we should do or not do. Usually we get notified of a hazard. We activate our QRF team, our QRF team, and partners with the police, Bombsquad and Fire will assess the situation, identify the hazard, mitigate it, and then turn the scene back over to the agency in charge. Full-scale exercises provide an opportunity to evaluate your plans, your policies, your procedures. You can put something in writing, but until you actually do it, you don't know how well it's going to work. So this is an opportunity to see in a controlled simulated environment how well our plans and standard operating procedures would work.