 I work for a network of 42 agencies, nonprofit agencies, in Ohio that weatherize low-income housing. We use the Weatherization Assistance Program as well as funding from utility companies and funding from the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, which is transferred over to weatherization because policymakers in Ohio prefer to invest in a more permanent solution to energy poverty. We're going to use all those sources of funds on a single unit to ensure we can provide comprehensive services. So we're going to do the electric base load like the refrigerators and the lighting and the fans. We're going to do the air sealing. We're going to do wall insulation, attic insulation, water pipe insulation for hot water pipes. We're going to literally do everything that we can find in that house and we'll use different pots of money to pay for it. So we can have that impact. Our average savings in a gas heated house is 30 percent of the energy used. So we're dropping customers energy bills by a quarter. And our average on the electric side is somewhere between 8 and 12 percent. So again, how about a pretty significant impact on the family budget, improving the quality of the home that people live in, potentially improving their health? So we think we have a pretty big impact on people's lives and I got over a thousand people in Ohio that are doing this kind of work and they love it. They really love it. Well electrification is the concept of converting from fossil fuel direct combustion like natural gas or propane to electricity driven services in a home. Most obvious would be a switch from gas heat to electric heat in the form of heat pumps. Technologies are making that a whole lot more possible than it used to. The new heating ventilation cooling systems that are built around heat pump technology are far, far more efficient than a comparable gas furnace would be, for example. Well, I think the primary issue that we're all confronting is climate change. And making your own home energy efficient is one of the ways you can reduce carbon emissions and other greenhouse gas emissions in a way that really matters to you, in a way that you have some control over. I always like to say that weatherization is the art of the possible. So within this house, what can we do to make it as efficient as possible given what we're starting with? We're looking for everything in a house that's got a savings to investment ratio of greater than one, which means it eventually pays for itself.