Good evening, Mayor and Board of Trustees Kelly Hotaling deputy town administrator. As mentioned before you tonight is an update on the status of our the town's grants that we have underway. So I'll be looking at page seven in your packet and it looks like this. So what's most important about grant management is completing the grants you currently have at hand. So out of the 17 grants that we have been awarded, we've completed about half of them and we have nine projects that are in progress or starting soon and that represents that of that $7.3 million, we have $5 million of funding that we'll be working through over the next couple of years. So with that, I'll talk about a couple of them for the public about what's underway and starting soon. So the most notable one, and that represents a very large portion of the awarded projects is the downtown improvements. So that is, that goes to the bull bouts the crosswalks, nuisance drainage and ADA improvements in our Old Town area. Right now that we have to work very closely with CDOT. Since it's, it's their road. And so our team is working very diligently about what can be done. Because if anytime you're working on drainage, you have to determine where the drainage will go. And you don't want to cause another nuisance downstream, if you will. So before they can really get into like the, like the pretty design of it, there's a lot of other things that have to be done for them. So there'll be working on that. And then things that we'll be starting soon as we were awarded funding to do a demonstration garden at the municipal services building through northern water. And so are we're going to save some money with that grant project, we'll be doing that in house with our parks department. So the first step will be kind of clearing some of that mulch, and then we have purchased or we'll be purchasing soon, those plants. And we'll be working through that this summer. And then hopefully, we'll have some display signs about, you know, some of those low intensive water plants that people might want to put in their garden. So that will be upcoming. We also were awarded money through AARP to do some Adirondack chairs and maybe an umbrella outside of the leaper center here. So we'll get working on that. And then most notably, is the viewpoint lift station that was through congressionally direct spending, and that had to pass the both the House and the Senate. And so that was an that's a very key project for us. And if the public isn't familiar with what a lift station is, a lift station helps pump wastewater from lower elevations to higher elevations, so we can transport it to our treatment facility. So that is over, over half a million dollars, I think it's $600,000. And that helps our ratepayers because that's directly correlated with our wastewater fund. So it's very difficult to find funding, when you have grants or projects that are already underway, because you have to start from the very beginning. And so what we've tried to do is look at our capital improvement plan, and find projects that haven't started yet. And so that one was a key one for our ratepayers that I wanted to note and then submitted I we do have this hybrid relationship with Main Street. So I did want to mention that our staff and Caitlin's position the community and business liaison, they did submit a grant for the community event fund through the Bohemian Foundation, and that will help them market the main street markets and if awarded that runs through Main Street. So I know it can be a little bit confusing, but that does help our businesses and entrepreneurs in our community and helping them to grow. Submitting soon if we receive Board of Trustees approval is an A an AMI network system, which is advanced metering infrastructure. And so this would have to come to the board for approval, should we want to do something along those lines, and you would find out more about that at that point. And then we have a list of potential grants. There's a variety of things on there. And then I'll be honest, the list is much longer. So I have a very long dirty staff list, if you will, with it, lots of lots of potential grants. But to try to clean it up. I just highlighted a couple of those that we have talked about before. And there's some new things that have come about that haven't been mentioned in here or, or publicly quite yet, is the senior RIDE program. Miss Garcia and I met with our senior group, and they had mentioned that they were looking for funding because they received a little bit less funding than before. AARP might be another avenue that we could reach out to that might have grant funding. And so I'm already kind of looking at their website to see what might be potential. But we just march was that last round of funding for this year, so it's a little too late, but maybe something for next year. And I'll keep my eyes peeled of what might be available. And then a fishing dock has been mentioned that we would like as we just had the kids to park stay with the fishing derby. So there might be some funding through that through the state. And then our proced board which is the Parks Rec open space trails advisory board. They've also mentioned a Veterans Memorial Plaza and so they're trying to they may be doing some fundraising on their own. You'll notice there's nothing in the budget for either for that Veterans Memorial Plaza. So I'll keep looking if there's some grants available for that, while also trying to support our staff will be through the maybe if they're doing fundraising efforts. So of course the board of trustees will be involved. So it did want I mentioned those things. And then I do want to mention our projects that have not been awarded. So there, there's a theme here that I would like some board of trustee direction is that we have applied for three different times, the parks and trail Master Plan grant, I did have a call with the state of Colorado about our most recent application, at have a score of 100, we scored a 70. And the awarded application scored in the 80s. So we were very close, they said we had the strongest letters of letters of support the tightest budget, the most readiness to go. But what they did say is that because this was through the Office of Economic Development and international trade, they wanted to see job production and all of the other applicants were able to prove right away that day one, we're going to support these 10 youth and getting a summer job through building trails. And, and so they said we just didn't have a tangible thing to say this is what we're bringing to the table. And I asked their the state's professional opinion. Do you think there's any other state grants that would support this type of master plan? They said Not, not necessarily. It's hard when you're doing recreation or outdoor things to support a master plan. You'll notice that there's other grants that we have received that it's like specifically for housing master plans. There's nothing as it relates to that. So when we're going up against other communities that are showing, here's where we're going to have a ribbon cutting and ours is a master plan. They just the funding committees don't want to fund it. So I think we do have $80,000, budgeted in 2023. And so I think we'll need a little bit of direction. You don't have to make a decision tonight. But I'd like you all to think about, should we try to keep looking for grant funding? Or at this point? Do we want to just take on that project in house and do the master plan with our dollars and then try to find the funding to fund a future trail build out or whatever the master plan might be? So that's something that the board and will want to discuss?