 I'm John Fellows, I'm the planning administrator with the City of Columbia and we are in the process of finishing up Columbia Compass which is the comprehensive plan for the City of Columbia. Every 10 years we do a complete update of our comprehensive plan for the city and we've been working on this particular plan for the last year and a half. We've had a number of public open houses, a number of surveys and a number of other ways for people to engage. We are currently finishing up the plan and we are hoping to involve everyone in the community one more time before we take the plan to Planning Commission and City Council. The comprehensive plan covers nine elements. They include population and housing, economic development, cultural resources as well as community facilities as well as a number of other topics and each of those go in depth into those areas and they set a number of recommendations, some fairly specific, some more general that are intended to allow the city to implement over the next five and ten years. As you're probably well aware because so many of you have been participating, Columbia Compass is really a process that's built on this important public input that you'll have given us and we are so grateful for that. What we'll be using this for is as we report back to council to let folks know in council what really stood out to folks. We've got 125 recommendations, that's a lot to take in, so helping them understand what is most important to Columbia Citizens is key. You are well aware, we have nine elements to the comprehensive plan. These are set forth by state statute. They are depicted on these beautiful elements or the beautiful icons that we have above us and each of the stations relates to those this evening. You've done some of the engagement, so we thank you, but we've really been glad to have some great public engagement through this process. We've done it both face to face in meetings like these and focus groups and the neighborhood meetings but we've also had great online engagement and the number of 5,500 points of engagement does not count the water bill mailers we sent, so maybe you all opened your water bill a month and saw the little Columbia Compass logo and it doesn't count the social media efforts we've taken on, so we're really excited about that. It's a quick run-through of the values and the perceptions, so from those early surveys and the early engagement, none of these should really surprise you, but we did hear a lot about what fits value and then what your perceptions of Columbia were. Whether those perceptions of Columbia were of the city as a governmental institution or of the community as a whole. People are concerned that we seem disconnected, that maybe we don't stick to our priorities and that we have infrastructure needs, so that was something we heard not surprisingly but resoundingly throughout the process. The meat of each chapter is really the recommendations, so those recommendations are followed up by case studies, a lot of the case studies are really there to help us understand what the best practices for those recommendations might be, what other communities have had success in, so we would encourage you to spend your time with those either tonight and the copies that we have here or online. I feel like we are on the cusp of making change. We have the time and the power to make the next generation, next 10, 20, 30 years, completely different and completely better. I really appreciate that they have these questionnaires that admitted accessible to everybody. I appreciate the open forum style and the voting process. I'm looking forward to seeing some of the new folks coming in that they're talking about and how we're hopefully going to take advantage of some of the city's strengths and take advantage of the riverfront and other things like this and help make Columbia an exciting place to live. I think they're all important because if you live and work here, the whole entire plan of what Columbia is going to look like is really important. I like to think that everybody's voice is important in something like this. That's why we have these forums so that regular citizens like myself can have a voice in what happens. I think it's also really important that people like me show up to events like this so that we can remind city council and county council that we have opinions and we have ideas about what needs to happen moving forward and I think it's important for us as responsible voters to know what's happening. If citizens aren't able to attend the public meetings they can certainly engage with us in other ways. We actually have a website for the project ColumbiaCompass.org and on that website you can find all of the documents that have been put out there as drafts for the public to engage in. There's information from our previous meetings and previous outreaches summaries of the surveys that have been conducted both in the fall and the spring of last year. If people would like to engage they can also engage on social media at Facebook and Twitter at ColaCompass.