 So today we've got a group in from QPS, we're going to have some chats about homelessness and some statistics and stories and then they're actually going to go out and sell the magazine with our vendors which is going to be quite a challenge for some of them. We're the team that's responsible for domestic and family violence and vulnerable persons. It's really important for us to actually get a realistic understanding of what homelessness as a key vulnerable group is. So it was really important for us to hear those stories from the gentleman that we heard from this morning. And now to experience what it's like for these guys trying to sell big issues and being out on the street and seeing what that involves. Help the homeless, by copy the big issue. The biggest challenge that they're likely to face today is people not making eye contact with them. It appears sometimes that when someone's got a big issue best on their suddenly invisible, you know, so I think that that will be a real eye opener. It's a really hard thing for these guys to make that call to get people to stop and engage to sell their magazines. A lot of people probably don't realise that the money that they make for selling the magazine actually goes back to that vendor. After hearing those stories and hearing about the real life of some of these guys and how easily something has happened to change their life. There are many parts to homelessness and vulnerable living that not everybody that turns up as a vulnerable or marginalised person is there necessarily from something that they've done. Sometimes it's been a different life path. Often it's a trauma. That's a really important thing for everyone to be very mindful of that things can be going really well for you now but you don't know what's around the corner and you can find yourself in this situation really easily. It means the world because I think the way that the police and vulnerable people interact is so vital to our vendors, their mental health, their self-esteem. If they do have an issue and they need to go to the police, it's fabulous that they now have friends in blue.