 There's really nothing more important to Pennsylvania's future than our ability to get our arms around this epidemic that is killing so many people. Let's address it by, first of all, saying this is a disease. This is not a moral fail. Specifically relative to the consolidation proposal. Maybe you could talk a little bit more about your vision of how that will better address some of these issues and help government to work a little bit better. In dealing with the drug and alcohol problem and actually addressing the opioid crisis in Pennsylvania, we have actually brought resources from all four of those agencies together. They have worked across agency barriers. Sometimes we forget that the boundaries that make so much sense to us in government don't actually make as much sense to the people who are trying to use our services. They make a phone call to the Department of Human Services innocently thinking, I have a human problem here. What can I do about it? And somebody with good reason says, this is the wrong department. You need Department of Health or you need Department of Revenue. So we need to do a better job of being easy to deal with. Government should not be this sort of austere thing that stands between people of Pennsylvania and a better life. It should be an enabler to that better life.