 Breast cancer is affected everyone out here in one way or another. We know it's the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women and second leading cause of cancer related death amongst women, only after lung cancer. One in eight women will develop breast cancer in their lifetime. Breast cancer is rare in men, but still very real, even with some of the men we know would love here in Columbia. The American Cancer Society predicts that over 10,700 deaths from breast cancer in 2019 alone. That's what we know is so important for us to come together on days like this, come together as a community, as civil servants, as healthcare providers, as families. Accompanied to recognize the service of so many that's personified in the person of Isabel Law. She worked to fight the disease. It's amazing talking to some of the ladies here. I want to Isabel's girls to spend time with some of her childhood friends who have been with her since kindergarten and realize that this amazing woman touched so many people over the course of her service before she went on to glory. We have the pleasure of having two of her daughters here with us today. I want to take a moment to recognize and bring up Tamara and Monique Law. This is an honor. This is a blessing. This is just an unbelievable testimony to who our mother has been. I was just telling someone that she would come home in the evening and be tired and spent. She gave everything she had to beat this disease on the behalf of other people and to share in their recovery and in their life. I just want to thank the mayor, thank everyone out here who came and who continue in the struggle against breast cancer. We just want to, again, just thank you for coming out today. I also want to recognize Sarah Sinclair. She's the manager of Prisma Health Breast Center. She's going to close us out with closing remarks. I want to take a moment to read the proclamation and, again, thank our members of city council and others for being here. I really want to thank our incredible employees. Job does not dictate who you are and what you do. A title is just a title. Being mayor or city council person doesn't make you a leader and the jobs that we do don't dictate who we are. These types of opportunities you really see where people are made of. And the men and women who came out here at the O Dark 30 to help pull together this day, but also over the last several months have been working to plan this. I just want to say thank you to you for your service to these incredible women and men that we're recognizing here today. Whereas October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month and whereas October 18th is National Memography Day and whereas for women in the U.S. breast cancer death rates are higher than those for any other cancer besides lung cancer and whereas breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among American women besides skin cancer and whereas about 1 in 8 U.S. women will develop breast cancer over the course of her lifetime and a significant number of males will also be diagnosed with breast cancer whereas early detection through screenings and mammograms is vital to breast health and whereas Prisma Health Breast Center in Columbia performs an average of 40,000 mammograms per year and launched her first mobile mammography program in the state in 1988 and whereas Isabel Law was the first breast health nurse navigator in our community and the mayor's Isabel Law Breast Cancer Breakfast honors her legacy. Therefore, be it resolved that I, Mayor Stephen K. Benjamin do hereby declare October 11, 2019 as Breast Cancer Awareness Day in the city of Columbia. Now it's my pleasure to introduce and recognize Sarah Sinclair, the manager of the Prisma Health Breast Center and obviously this event and tomorrow's amazing events would not be possible without the leadership of our friend Samuel Tendenbaum, the president of Prisma Health Foundation. I would like to thank you guys on behalf of the Breast Center at Prisma Health. I didn't personally know Isabel but I can see and hear about her legacy all the time. It is very important that we all are aware of breast cancer and I'd like to invite you all to get your mammograms as soon as possible. Thank you. Thanks again and remember we are Columbia.