 Colonial Parkway is really an extraordinary resource. It links Yorktown, Jamestown, and Williamsburg to a great historic site. It's basically two lanes wide. It has a brown surface. The signs are relatively small. Their vistas opened up through the trees so that you see picturesque marshland as well as great expenses of the river. It's really important that the natural landscape which is so important to the story remains unspoiled and unified with the three surviving sites. Where we are right now is a terribly important piece of that scenic experience. We've left Jamestown. We've headed along the James River. And right at this point, it's the grandest view. This is precisely where it's being suggested the transmission lines be placed. The towers are large. There are a lot of them. Yes, they are gray, I suppose, or said to be gray. They said, oh, they're three miles away. They won't be that much of a problem. It's not really the case. They will improve very dramatically on a scene that's been preserved pretty much as it was since 1607. We were offered up a wonderful resource to have this incredible scenic highway delicate in scale and diverse in character between the three sites. We're fortunate to have that. My pitch is it's our generation's responsibility not to spoil that.