Yeah, that Main Street project is probably an eight or nine year process. Our Main Street is actually US Highway 83, so it's a state highway. And the state highway system has one and six year road plans. And the one year plans are those that are funded in bid and then the six year like eventual, and we found that we were on the six year plan for, I think, 10 years. We found out it was it was the second oldest concrete in the state highway system. And we were just having kind of, you know, just deterioration as a result. And so we we got together with the Department of Roads, now the Department of Transportation, to help better define the timeline on the project, but also to redefine how you engage community through these processes. And part of that was engaging with the University of Nebraska Architecture College. We had a group of students come up to help us, you know, initially kind of lay out a process and some ideas for this main street revitalization and that also led to a grant from the Citizens Institute of Rural Design, which is under the National Endowment of the Arts. Long story short, we had a lot of different experts to help us but those experts were there to help the community have a conversation about what we wanted Main Street to look like. So it all culminated with, you know, after some surveys a bunch of conversations we had about two days of meetings in Valentine with all of the designers and all of the engineers and all the stakeholders and collaboratively defined what our downtown was going to look like from bone structure. That process... that construction project actually is 90% completed, we'll call it effectively completed, they did it just this last year, Nebraska's newest Main Street will be open here this as soon as the snow melts.