 I am a volunteer here on the jelly team, so I work with the jellyfish program. This building was not original, they had to build this building afterwards, I guess there was originally a trailer here in addition to the aquarium, so they actually built a larger building to accommodate the lab and the classroom to be able to have classes down here. Typically the days that I'm down here I do the feeding of the jellyfish as well as water changes and then I do general maintenance in the program as well as doing various scientific things like checking water quality and balancing that kind of thing. I'm Jenna Fallow and I'm a volunteer here at the MASS Center. At the aquarium we will show people around and teach them about our animals and different environmental problems and other things that are going on here at Redondo. What I've noticed about the MASS Center versus the larger aquariums is because we are smaller, especially during discovery days when we have the general public come in. It's nicer for families with smaller kids, younger kids because they have a shorter attention span than older kids do and the larger aquariums have so much going on that they lose interest really quickly. So having a smaller aquarium is beneficial to the younger people in the population to be able to come out and be able to look at the stuff that we have, be able to interact with the touch tanks, but we also have the classroom so students at Highline who take classes down here also have the benefit of being able to come to the aquarium and be free to the public so you can just come in on a Saturday for 10 minutes if you're walking by and you don't have to pay at the door and then be able to. So they come from right out here in Redondo. We have divers that go down and they will collect fish, any fish that we need that we have on our list or any other species that we think it would be really interesting in our aquarium. Sometimes we'll go all around the Puget Sound just to get some of the animals that we have here.