 We want to welcome everybody today. You see what we've built out here. It is yours. It is yours to utilize. It's yours to help us maintain and protect and keep clean. I invite you to come out, particularly on Sundays. My gosh, this place will be packed and it's not just the players and the coaches and the officials, but it's the families that come out on Sundays in this community to celebrate and come together. Do you guys and gals like the improvements here? As Richard alluded to earlier, $2.6 million in improvements, a combination of gas well funds, capital improvement funds, and pipeline revenue, the renovation of three baseball fields in one softball field, including a fence replacement, field light enhancements, bullpins, batting cages, color-coded park elements, remote control electronic scoreboards, synthetic turf dugouts, and bleach cover seating capacity of 500 spectators per field. Parking spots have been enhanced. There's a walking trail with benches, a small pavilion, a large picnic and pavilion area, and a brand new fully accessible playground area. The reason that this is important and the reason we're here this morning on this Saturday is because parks are such a valuable and integral part of quality of life in our community. Los parques son de la comunidad y la comunidad quiere y ama mucho los parques. The community indeed loves their parks. And of course, when you have wonderful parks like Rockwood Park, Lack Trinity Park, parks all over the city, so many that we could name, they really add to the appeal of the city. It helps us in terms of economic development, in terms of people feeling like they belong to a great city. Families come out to the parks together. And now this wonderful facility here will be a showcase park for the city of Fort Worth, and I believe that is critical and important today. And I'm so excited. Three, two, one, cut that ribbon.