Okay? There we go. We're not right, okay, so we just encourage as many applications as possible for the important program. So thank you, Erin for sharing that at the at the beginning. So obviously, I think you're all very familiar with the bead program and and the ins and outs of it, but I just kind of wanted to give you an overview of where the state broadband office is at in administering it in the timeline, and kind of what some of the NTIA pending guidance could mean for the program. So I think you're pretty familiar with with this visual here, but just as a reminder, you know, we're right in between that that yellow circle right here, so we're right round one is closed. So round one, just as a reminder, was our fiber priority application phase. So that closed officially on March 7. So our team has been evaluating, scoring, validating, negotiating and that, and really just ensuring that all of the the eyes are dotted, the T's are crossed, and we're reading all of this data correctly. I mean, if anybody here was an applicant, they would know that this was a thoroughly robust application that required a lot of different data, as opposed. Part of it, you know, mapping data, financial capacity, stakeholder engagement, letters of support. I mean, really anything under the sun that could make you show that you have the demonstration and capacity to build and and be able to administer, really just a high profile infrastructure program that has so much impact across the state. So we've been over the last month and a half, close to two months have been looking, evaluating and scoring and negotiating all these applications. Round two is set to open June 3. Right now, we're committed to keeping that date, despite any NTIA guidance that could come. You know, I'll just kind of say it here at the top, the state broadband office is committed to moving full steam ahead here. You know, I don't think it would take, it's really not a partisan comment here, to say that the bead program has taken longer than probably most people would have anticipated. So you know, from our public administrator role, we understand that we have equipment to the state of Arizona and every single Arizona in to ensure that we're delivering high speed internet as efficiently as we possibly can. So you know, we're not going to try to look at a magic Krystal ball to see what this guidance could do for the bead program. We're committed to moving full steam ahead. I'll show you some data on the next slide here in a second. But you know, we think that we ran a pretty darn good program and pretty dar darn good results from the first round, and we're confident that any type of guidance that can come out from NTIA in the coming weeks should inhibit the performance in the structure of the bead program that Arizona has created. So with that being said, you know, we're going to be adaptable to any type of guidance that does come out, but we're confident that it's not going to have too much or not create too much of a roadblock for us to keep going and administer the program. So again, this is all speculation, but we've heard mid May for this guidance. Most recently, we've heard June or July. We don't have any insight on what is going to be in that guy. I'm sure we all could have a guess and pull something together and and share what that would be, and we could be right. We could be wrong. But, you know, I think a lot of it's in flux. I think a lot of the decision making is happening at the top, top level, from the Secretary himself through the White House. So you know, we don't know what this guidance is going to look like, and we're not in the business of guessing it either. So you know, we have, we have our guidelines, we have our our our commitments that is under the current B program, and we have pretty strict timelines. So you know, we wait a day or anything. You know we're we're risking being in compliant and you know, that's not something that we want to do, like we had to commit to Arizona to make sure that, you know, we're doing this program as best as we possibly can. So a couple weeks ago, obviously, when NTIA indicated that they are going to release this new guidance. They granted a blanket 90 day extension for all states. So where that puts us, excuse me, is roughly at an end of October, deadline we still need to confirm with NTIA what that date is. I think you kind of get the gist of where we're going here, but it I think somewhere around Halloween, maybe a week before, is what we're prepared for, you know. And like I said, obviously we want to move as quickly as quickly as we possibly can. But, you know, if NTIA is providing us more time to make sure that we're doing this properly and to adjust to any guidance, then we're going to take it, you know, we understand that this is once in a generation funding, you know, despite it taking a long time to implement it, we want to be pretty methodical and pretty strategic in how we're doing this. So, you know, for an extra 90 days to ensure that we're going to have a generation of infrastructure and really just a sustainable infrastructure in place, we're going to take it. So, you know, that's our commitment. That's how we're reacting to NTIA guidance. You. And that's really all we know either i This is Steve. That's not one of the questions that I'm going to shy away from. Like that's actually what what we know right now from NTIA.