that, Scott, let me let me jump in there. And just to kind of add a little context and maybe some encouragement on federal facilities or really any publicly owned facilities, when those need to come through any kind of planning, process approval process, or even kind of the building permitting process, we have very limited authority as a local government to regulate it, or kind of preempt it, you know, if they come through a planning process, it's a location and an extent process is what it's called, where it's more of an advisory kind of decision by your planning commission. It's not regulatory, and in the same way, and so yeah, we don't, we don't have a ton of control. But, you know, if, if you've identified, which federal agency is owning that, or if it's northern water, in the case of the facility up by Mary's Lake, Bureau of Reclamation, FSC, the Bureau of record northern water, I would encourage you to, you know, reach out to the local manager there or, you know, look for some contact information, just let them know that, you know, they may not listen, or do anything about it, but, you know, if they may not have have recognized the impact that they're, they're causing, especially if it's creating a safety issue along the highway or, or something like that, to the extent that it's on private property. You can always if you feel like they might be, you know, if it was a building that was recently approved or went up, they might be in violation of their plans that were approved, or maybe not, we don't have a lot of tools for enforcing nuisances, as it relates to lighting. But if a project was approved with a certain type of lighting, and that's not what they installed, or the it's not how they're operating, then there are some cases where there could be a code violation that we can take a look at.