good morning, everyone. And thank you so much, Steve, for giving me this opportunity. My name is Sandip Bhowmick, State Broadband Director here at Arizona Commerce Authority. So as you already probably know, that we did last month we published on August 22. Our five year action plan is posted on our website. So a five year action plan is the main milestone up sorry, one of the first milestone of the billion dollar funding state has received so we have three milestone to complete before actually, four milestone to complete before we access this fund. Number one was five year milestone or five year action plan. Second one is the initial plan that's due on December 27. This year, then the challenge process, and the final plan will be due based on when the initial plan is getting approved, 365 days after that. So if we submit the initial plan at the end of this year, and NTIA takes approximately 90 days to approve. In that case, the final plan will be due on March 2025 years. So somewhere between beginning of 2025 to end of 2020 I'm sorry, March to March 2025. So I do understand that some of you might have questions about the process. Before even we access this funding, we have to make sure that we are submitting all the requirements asked by NTIA or as per the guideline, because definitely IGA is the assigned bill. And we need to fulfill this requirement before we access the money. So as I mentioned in the initial plan, we are in the initial plan plan phase right now. So initial plan has, it's a little bit more technical and more strategical, instead of like just talking broadband in an overview. So initial plan has two different volumes, Volume One and volume two. Volume One talks about that how state, there are two types of challenge process. One is the federal challenge process we went through last year. And the challenge process we are talking about right now is the state challenge process. That means if you go to FCC map, and now you actually pull out your community, and you see even though an address, it doesn't have to be in community and address. And you see that the provider claimed a certain speed, which is not exactly right for your community, you'd be able to submit a challenge to the state and a state will take that data evaluated and send it directly to the providers. And then provider will have 30 days to rebut somebody rebuttal against that challenge. It provider does not submit a rebuttal or the evidence they submit is not good enough, then we'll open up those areas for bid funding. I just want to clarify one thing that doesn't change anything on the funding. And to give you an example, we have 318,000 household right now approximately, we would we need to cover with reliable broadband services within with this billion dollars. So if we add another 5000 addresses 10,000 addresses on top of that we are still liable to connect all these households within this billion dollars. So it does not change anything funding wise, but it gives you an opportunity equally participate into the bead funding if your area was treated as served, but actually it's not so based on the speed based on the latency based on the uplink and downlink. So that's the challenge for us. So state is coming up with a proposal that what exactly is eligible for the challenge process that's part of volume one, and another very important part of the volume one and I would like to thank you a few few folks here in this call who already send us their database of community anchor Institute. So one of the very crucial part of volumes Who is coming least of community anchor Institute, it doesn't have to be all community anchor Institute is that the community anchor Institute which is lacking less than one gig symmetrical. So what we are doing, we took the the list of community categories of the community anchor Institute from the NPI guideline, which include schools, libraries, higher education institutes health center, state and locally owned buildings. Sorry, let me let me have a quick look, state and local on building public safety facilities, employment centers, Senior Center and correctional facilities for for the state of Arizona. We're making a master database so that we can actually publish at some point this information into our state Broadband Map, as well as we are running an algorithm right now that any fiber line goes within 500 feet of those facilities, we're considering them served. With one week symmetrical probably there is not available. Connectivity right now based on price or based on other factor, or based on the business plan the company is offering but we are kind of we're basically considering them serve because there is an availability, that's the NTA guideline. So we'll be publishing a list of the whole community and constitute we are putting together as well as what is served what is unserved, what is underserved. So that's volume one. We are hoping the volume one requests both volume requests a 30 day public comment period, we're hoping to publish Volume One, beginning of October, probably first week of October, and it can be open for public comment for 30 days. In between this public comment period, we'll keep working adding community anchor Institute. And if you go through that list and you feel are you see any list or any schools, colleges libraries are missing from that list, feel free to submit it to our portal of public comments, or you can directly email it to us we'll be adding that as part of this community and Institute list. Also, there is a NTIA review process involved in this process. So it can all go parallel. Before we submit to NTIA higher ups to review this whole thing, we can go back and forth with the technical assistance team to see what exactly is the is a particular thing we can talk about Arizona in that plan. The Volume Two is more extensive. There are 25 requirements in Volume Two, which includes Workforce Development Plan, climate resiliency, what's our plan for subgrantee selection process, etc, etc. The subgrantee selection process is the heart of volume 270 out of 100% 75% requirement is coming from NTIA. So as a state we only have 25% to play with. So it's kind of up to us that what we can cram in within that 25%. Of course, that's a very limited per sentence for the states, we have to be creative. And we have to make sure that whatever we are assigning right next to those categories, what we have we are selecting are meaningful. So that will also be published for public comment at the end of I think beginning of November, and it will be open for one month of public comment until end of November. In the beginning of December, we'll add all this public comment or address this public comment into the into the report and submit both of this volume to NTI by December 26. So that's the overall update I have that's the short term goal I have before we roll into the challenge process. Oh, just wanted to add that if for some reason we miss community address during this phase two, like in Volume One, we can you can still submit those as a challenge process during the challenge process time. beginning of next year. What we are defining in volume one right now is how we are going to run the challenge process, not the exact challenge process. The challenge process will be will open next year approximately in the February or March timeframe. And it will be open for 90 days. So the it's a little bit flexible. I don't want to call it flexible, but it's a little bit flexible on our site. We need to run the challenge process before we submit the final plan which is due end of 2024. But we need we are making sure from our side that our counties, cities, nonprofit organizations, ISPs are all ready to submit that challenge process because once we open up that 90 Day Windows window, we have to accept the challenge and execute it. So it's definitely a daunting task. So we are making sure that we know what's coming our way and communities are ready. So that's the overall update. I'd be happy to take any question.