 DEMA is set up so we have two different organizations within it. So we've got the Military Affairs, which is a National Guard, and then we have the Emergency Management, which is another division. And so our emergency management is the centralizing hub that fields requests from counties when they're overwhelmed, and then they send out to find sourcing requests to go in and help the counties. It just so happens that in this particular instance up in Flagstaff, the source that they went to was the National Guard, which is just another similar division within the same agency. Basically they're here to maintain flood remediation, mitigation from the effects of the roads that have been washed out, and the debris that have been other organic material that's come in to take out the roads and prevent any sort of ingress or egress out of community. Nothing is ever what you plan, and that's really where the Army National Guard has come in and been just a godsend wonderful partner, not only to help take care of some of the stuff where our crews have been working around the clock, need to be spelled for a bit, but taking care of projects like this to get these neighborhood roads open and passable.