 So, in the last two and a half minutes, let me say this, thank you for participating today. It does not end here. And I was talking to my friends from the Dalai Lama Center today, and they were telling me about a project that they're doing, HeartMind Education, one example of one of the many things that's going on, people in this room are getting organized. The appetite that they've discovered for what they're doing since they launched it is insatiable. And there is an appetite for the kinds of programming that we are talking about, for the kinds of things that Kevin is doing up at Timberline, for what they're doing at Frank Hurt, for what they're doing at Safe Teen, for the work that we are doing as a government with a race bullying. There is a tremendous appetite out there, and we need to take advantage of that as activists who care passionately about doing something, about bullying and making schools safe for kids. So let's take what we've learned today. Let's take Barbara Coleroso's wisdom, decades of work on anti-bullying and on parenting. Let's take what we learned from her passionate talk today back to our communities and share it with parents and students and educators and members of the community. Let's take what we heard from Merlin about cyber safety and take it back to our kids and our students and make sure that they know how to protect themselves. Make sure that we're also engaged in protecting them. Let's take the stories that we heard from Buffy and Jay that are bravely told and remember that that can happen to any of us in our workplaces, any of us in our schools, and that we need to be resilient and we need to be brave to stand up and step in. Let's take what we heard from Teresa and remember that there are online tools out there, that there is training happening, and that we need to continue to build it. We need to evolve it. This doesn't stop here and the idea of bringing everybody here together today was while we are thinking about bullying, in particular in British Columbia, in the wake of some terrible tragedies, let's take these moments that we have while so many people outside this room are also equally paying attention and use it and use it well so that those that we have lost and the tragedy of their loss is not without meaning. That is our task to take this and the passion that we've heard in the room today and the information that we've shared and share it in our communities across the province and across the country and around the world if it's online. This is an evolving project. I want to say thank you for all the feedback that you've given us. We are going to take it. We're going to build it into what we're doing and we're going to keep growing it. You can email me premier at agov.bc.ca if you want to reach me. You can find Don at his email address through the Ministry of Education. We want to keep this going and we can't let it end here as a few of you said this has got to be sustainable because we have a moment, a moment in time where we can really make a big difference and it begins with all of us. It is the power of one individual. It is always a power of just one person that changes the world around them and as I said to everybody at We Day, we should endeavor all the time to be that person. It's a hard task. I certainly don't meet that goal for myself all the time but we should try. We should strive. So thank you very much all of you for participating. This has been a fantastic day for me and I know for Don and for all of my colleagues and I hope for all of you too and so it begins. Thank you.