thanks. It's great to be here. I missed everybody. We've been very busy. We've been very fortunate. Our team has just done a couple of training events, which were such a thrill to be producing events. Once again, what's your like plain old vanilla multi point comfort video conferencing, but with bodies in the room at the same time, I really feel like hybrid events like that are our future, you know, to be able to share lunch and visit with our colleagues, while being able to include people who don't have the opportunity to travel is, is where we really are. And if we want to build those types of rich experiences, I think that's what we need to do. So we went to Nevada, and we scheduled facilities in Reno, Carson City and Las Vegas. And we did a telehealth statewide training about Nevada sharing the battery sources about Nevada broadband and promoting ACP and all the great things that make telehealth happen. We then also have an audience online. Well, last week, we went to Colorado. And we did only half of that. And it was somewhat disappointing because the other thing you get with a hybrid event is the gift that keeps giving right you can have a recording at the same time that you're producing that great hybrid experience. So we went to Denver last week, and it was amazing. It was a a national caliber augmented reality virtual reality, psychiatry Department of Psychiatry innovations at the University of Colorado and they brought in other national experts. Well, you know, we met, we measure our success in numbers. And it's unfortunate to say, we had 50 people in the room. But it was a great experience for us. 50 people, right? If this had been hybrid, we maybe would have had another 100 people online, right, we would have put together all of all of our energy and sharing these amazing resources with a lot more people and we'd have that great package at the end. And we do have beautiful PDFs of people's PowerPoints and great information to share. I learned a heck of a lot. But it is labor intensive to do it that way. And, and there's a couple of really great upcoming events here in Arizona. One is for tribal health equity, and it's on the focus of diabetes, it's being produced with the Arizona diabetes coalition. And I haven't been able to sell them on this whole hybrid idea. But I think about doing outreach here in Arizona and and now we are all very aware that we have 22 tribes that we should all be serving. But I don't think there's a lot of us who can name those 22 tribes and some of them are very difficult to reach in terms of outreach. So I think about our future and telehealth and health equity and digital equity and, and being able to use technology to prepare the healthcare workforce of the future, to reach people in remote places. I really do think if we want to truly be equitable, and do outreach to all of those 22 tribes and serve the entire state of Arizona, we still have to do things in a hybrid way. I really do. I don't I don't think we can continue to require people to be at their desk, but I also don't think we we live in a world where we need to require people to travel to participate in these in these greats, educational opportunities. I've shared my PDF in the chat because there are a couple of other really great upcoming events. There's a community health worker conference that's taking place here in November in Tucson. It's November 7 through ninth and it's being produced by our Arizona, Native American Area Health Education Center. And there'll be a lot of folks who are producing educational materials and working with CHWs. And for those of you who aren't familiar, you may have heard me and others talk about it before, you know, the the end the workforce that really connects people to health care here in Arizona been busy doing that as as digital navigators before they were called that. The community health workers, community, promo tours, promo, promo tours, they salute in southern Arizona as well as as challenged the Arizona community health outreach workers have all settled on this global term, nationally of CHW. And they are all people that do the same job for different communities and have different levels of training. And our access here in Arizona has approved three billing codes for these people to teach technology, which is really great news. It's really It's exceptionally great news for Malia and Erin and is we work on telehealth and libraries. Because what this means is there's a billing code for primary care providers, and community health centers. To assign a community health worker who has been certified and can have their time billed they can, they can actually assign a CHW teach technology to people at the library, where we've been investing in technology for people who don't have it. And I think if we as we work towards digital equity, we have to continue to accommodate and make plans for public spaces for people to have private conversations about their health, we need to spend and invest some of that money in connected devices for people who don't have them. But we also really need to count on those digital navigators and digital health navigators to be the people who teach that technology to get people connected to a breast cancer support group in their own language or to get people connected to diabetes education. And the key to everybody's success in the world of health care is is isn't billable, and well, now, teaching technology is billable. So it's a really exciting time. And there are a couple of those resources in that PDF PDF, too, that I shared so so please check it out. There's a lot going on. And we are working hard to produce our next telehealth and libraries location into the city. And this is something that the team is all very excited about and being able to have available some basic telehealth peripherals, we're working on planning educational events in which we can support the technology when we invite patrons to the libraries. And it's been wonderful to work with Aaron who's been working on building these great digital navigator resources. And we're working together with other organizations and community partners to look at how we can also produce and share digital health navigators and something that's really been helpful for me is to network within the Arizona Digital Inclusion network with other people who are doing that exact thing. So that we are we are cohesively collecting along with the National telehealth resource centers, great ways, great places, building building links, to really connect people to to really excellent healthcare resources and, and connecting people to healthcare who don't have it. And to me, you know, digital equity equals access to technology, which equals access to connected technology, which equals access to health care, and it's a fantastic project to be working on. And I would love to, if we have time, maybe maybe Molen Aaron can share an update to from the library's perspective.