 Mr. Lewis, it's good to see you again, my friend. What can we do to make sure that low-income communities and underserved communities actually get the broadband services that they need? Thank you, Congressman, and it's good to see you as well. Number one, we need to have a long-term benefit for low-income consumers. Number two, we need to do everything we can to promote competition in the marketplace. And number three, we need to remember that the cost to consumers is not just the cost of the service. So consumers are also paying tremendous amounts of money in fees on their broadband lines right now, hidden fees, below-the-line fees. They're paying for rentals of modems and other devices. And then there's the cost of the actual device that they use, the computer or the laptop, that when you have a family of four these days, if everyone's online at the same time, requires multiple devices. Thank you for that. When it comes to those hidden fees and whatnot, do you have a suggestion on how we should deal with those? I think it starts with transparency. I think Ms. Eschew and others have worked for years to mandate a level of transparency around below-the-line fees and we support that. But we need to have truth in billing and accuracy in the fees that are charged and why they're being charged so that people get the actual prices, and not just an advertised price with fees added onto it later on. Thank you, sir.