 Thank you very much. I'm Eric The Hedy and I'm the Director of Legal Programs at RISIS. We're a non-profit immigration law firm here in San Antonio. We have four offices, two here in San Antonio, one in Corpus Christi and one in Austin, Texas. We have seven legal programs, two of our largest programs. One involves dealing with refugees. So when we oftentimes will assist refugees one year past their entry to the United States to achieve lawful permanent residence. So they come to our office, typically Burmese, Iraqis, Nepalese, people from East Africa, and we assist in the further legalization of their presence here in the United States. We also assist in things like travel documents, naturalization. Once you become a lawful permanent resident, you become a citizen, you can become a citizen after a certain amount of time, and we also assist in those applications with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Service. We also provide legal defense when people are in deportation proceedings. One of our larger pockets of legal representation happened to be in those who were seeking asylum here in the United States or protection under the Torture Convention, International Torture Convention. Now we talked about, I was asked to talk about a little bit here today about the crisis at the border. RISIS is also the legal service agency that is going to Lackland. We are going to Lackland practically every day. We have at least a group of six to ten of our lawyers and legal assistants going to Lackland to provide Know Your Rights presentations to the unaccompanied minors as well as provide legal screenings. In fact this past week we provided Know Your Rights presentations to over a thousand children as well as over 400 legal screenings intakes to see if there is some sort of legal sufficiency for the children to actually be able to remain here in the United States. The work we're finding is that the children are not cognizant that they're part of any kind of mass migration to the United States. They just know that they are fleeing something whether it be escaping abuse, abandonment, or neglect in their home country. Oftentimes the children haven't been to school in years. They're moving from home to home. The parents have abandoned them from the time they were very young and a lot of the children are escaping forced conscription into gangs. They realize that's bad, they've been abused, sometimes assaulted by other gang members trying to forcibly conscript the children into gangs. So they're just part of this movement of escaping the current ills of whichever country they're coming from. So what that allows the children to do if they can demonstrate that they are victims of abuse, abandonment, or neglect by one or both parents, it does allow the child to seek what is called special immigrant juvenile status here in the United States. And I won't bore you with all the legal details, those boring things. If you're interested, you can come and talk to us at the Raisa's table, but once a child is able to demonstrate they've been abused, abandoned, or neglected by one or both parents, then they're able to apply for what is called special immigrant juvenile status. And once that application is approved by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Service, the children can then apply for lawful permanent residence. But thank you very much for having us here today. And again, if you have any questions regarding any of the immigration matters, please come see us at the Raisa's table. And Raisa's is an acronym for the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Service. Okay, thank you very much.