 My name is Houdi Vega and I work for the City of San Antonio Metropolitan Health District. I'm not an academic but my day-to-day is managing a program that we are doing community organizing in at-risk connection neighborhoods. So we're really going to see first hand from certain neighborhoods what's happening on the ground, what people are struggling with. The Health Department didn't really think that an official stance on the effects of gentrification as far as we're able to help but this National Disease Control does. And so they know nationally that there are effects that on at-risk or local communities can have disastrous effects such as dealing with access to healthy food, access to public space and recreation and also access to transportation, affordable housing. We're really looking at it through kind of a health and good lens. We know that in San Antonio we have tremendous health disparities. Of course I can be seeing one of our largest but asthma, diabetes, obesity. And all of this is where the compound and people have to be displaced and moved into another neighborhood. They aren't able to access the same mental health. Mental health is huge. You should hear in our neighborhoods and other people who effectively use their support system and are already vulnerable. There's just tremendous effects on this health and on their ability to afford healthy food and medication and also access healthcare. So I guess I didn't really come very prepared today. I'm sorry, I was going to put up here. But basically we really would like, in working with community, what we share a lot is that they are the last informed. They are the last asked. And this is of course historical in that in San Antonio like in most of the nation, the rights of the impoverished and the rights of those who are at risk are really considered last in making policy decisions. So when we really tried so much in these neighborhoods in Oregon and it's been a tremendous difficulty at first because people have never been asked. They are so used to having decisions made for them. But I, this is a feedback that there's not even a language and has kind of been a better language as to what do you really want both to show to see and of course to get in line and everyone just wants a decent life to be able to afford to live, to live a healthy and healthy life for the family and the community. And so from our perspective we really just like to see health and taking into consideration when making these policy decisions to displace people and also to remind the politicians in the room that there are tremendous costs at risk as far as health is concerned in particular. In San Antonio we have possibly one of the highest amputation, diabetic amputation rates. If you can imagine an amputation and this is very personal to me because some of those are amputations but imagine an amputation whose on a fixed income who is going to effectively lose their house or they can't afford their taxes. This is tremendous, tremendous impact on their whole family, not just that person that they care to take groups, if they can take their son or children. And the costs are just tremendous and without that support system and without that access to care that person might have another amputation and maybe get out the analysis. I think the health costs are tremendous and we have started and the health department could have started to really kind of quantify all those health costs but it's just so compounded by displacing a lot of people and I'm asking that we consider that as well when we're trying to think about the future of our city and the economic solvency of our city because we're being crippled in terms of health costs. Thank you.