 A lot of times we don't know our neighbors, or if we know our neighbors, we don't see them and talk to them on a regular basis. And this isn't just at least one night a year that people intentionally say I'm going to, no matter how busy I am, I'm going to come out, I'm going to be with my neighbors, I'm going to have some great ice cream and food and see people and just be neighborly and be a community. Everybody gets a chance to meet new neighbors that they probably didn't know before. Communicate with each other. Police and the community together, a positive environment, I think goes a long, long way, especially in today's environment, today's society, where maybe the police and the communities, relationships aren't ideal and the eyes of many people. This gives all of us an opportunity to kind of help connect the dots, help bridge the gap. The people get to know each other, they get to know their neighbors real well, and for something like this, National Light Out, it's always a great chance for people to come out and meet people they didn't know and just kind of hang out and visit, especially with the police here, the Columbia police. Not only giving out a lot of school supplies to our youth in the community, but also it was really, really good and neat to see different law enforcement agencies come together along with the community. I think that sends a strong, strong message to our communities when it comes to offering a safer environment. Columbia, we're so strong in our neighborhoods. The great part about it is that you've got neighborhoods all over the city having National Light Out. Some neighborhoods coming together, so you're not just with the people in your neighborhood, but you're with people with adjacent neighborhoods. And so to me, it's just a great night of community and what better way to spend a famously hot August evening.