 As mentioned, I'm Mike Shannon. I'm the Director of the City's Development Service and Department, and what that means is I received the zoning portion for the city, the Building Department and Code Enforcement. So thanks for having me here tonight. Just a few updates of what we're working on in this area. The biggest thing, we are facilitating kind of leading the effort with our noise ordinance task force. So as you may or may not know, for the past year and a half, we've been asked by City Council to look at our current noise code because we have, and not just in this area, all over the city, we have thousands of noise complaints each year, and we currently address them in accordance with our current code. The Council has asked us to work with a task force, a balanced task force, and I actually see several of them here today. So if you're on the task force or you've been attending regularly, do you mind just kind of raising your hand a little bit? I see a few of you, three, four, five, six, okay, seven. All right, so a bunch of you. There's actually 15 members of the task force plus another couple dozen folks that regularly join. And we have been working and going through, not only the current code, trying to figure out what we should do differently, if anything. We've also actually been working with additional code enforcement in the evening dedicated to noise complaints, okay? So since October, we have some dedicated code officers. It's the first time we've done this. They work actually from 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. And they've addressed over 2,500 calls since October. We have found a lot of non-compliance. We've actually found a lot of compliance. So I think part of the issue will be education throughout the city of what is a noise violation and what isn't. But we actually have found about 15% of the calls that we get are actually in violation when we get there, okay? So 85% of the time there's no violation, about 15% of the time. We have statistics that we could bore you with. I have them all on my website. Anybody wants them, we can show you all the calls. We actually have a log of all the calls that we have. It's all open on our website. But the goal is to use that data and what we're finding and seeing out there in the real world, which you are all experiencing, but not just here, citywide, to figure out what we can do to help business owners in neighborhoods, as well as, we get a lot of calls from neighbors having issues with their neighbors, right? The house party, maybe, right? Okay. So we're trying to figure out what we can do better to help those entities, all of those entities coexist. We actually just brought on, you may have seen some of our news members have actually reported on this, but we actually, just this month, brought in a noise expert kind of consultant that does this, works on noise ordinance, has had some success nationally, helping develop a better ordinance that really allows people to coexist a little bit better. And I think, I think, Martin, you kind of started this with how can we coexist better with some of these issues and noise being one of them? So certainly that's the biggest thing we're working on. It will likely take us through the summer months before we can bring something back to the mayor and council with recommendations, but we're gonna continue working with the members of the neighborhood, the members of the business community, and all others that are involved. So we're kind of excited about it. It's not an easy issue. It's not, I think if we had a simple solution, we would have probably enacted it last fall, but it's something we're gonna continue working with until we get it right. I have a lot of information that I can share with everybody. I think you guys have all the information because you've been very involved. So that's the biggest issue I have for you and I'll be around for the rest of the meeting to talk about any other issues for you.