 In outside Africa, the debt toll from last week's condominium and tower collapse in Florida have risen to 22 points. Certain rescue crews had found two more bodies on Friday, July 2nd. As of Friday afternoon, 126 people were listed as missing and feared buried beneath tones of concrete, twisted metal and lumber, as the search stretched into its ninth day. Meanwhile, Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniela Kava announced that she had signed an emergency order to demolish the remains of the building. And no survivors have been pulled alive from the ruins since the first few hours after the Champlain Tower's South Tower partially caved in on itself early on June 24th, as most residents slept. And over the course of today's search, we did recover two additional victims. We now have 22 confirmed deaths, 188 people accounted for, and 126 unaccounted for. This afternoon, I signed an emergency order authorizing the demolition of the building in the interest of public health and safety as soon as the engineer signed off on the next steps to begin the demolition process. So it's important to note that we're still evaluating all possible impacts and determining the best timeline to actually begin the demolition. Signing the order now is important so that it can help us move quickly as soon as we decided the best methodology to demolish and the specific start date.