Our union is well known at our capital. And so they did get us a chief sponsor, and then they set up some lobbies. And again, like I said, they're mostly a nursing union, so they have an annual lobby day where they bring all of their main legislative priorities. I would say that we were, like, maybe not a main legislative priority, but we made it a main legislative priority. Good for you. We were loud enough with our government relations team about it, and passionate enough, and we showed them that we had members, and members, meaning other colleagues of mine at our agency, that wanted to go down and lobby this bill. And so they actually set up a mini lobby day just for our bill, where we went down capital with one member of our gr team, government relations team, nice. And it was almost like being on a field trip where we didn't have to worry about the logistics. All the meetings were set up for us. We just had to worry about telling our story. And that comes so easily to us as healthcare workers. Like, just talk about your job, you know, yeah, and like, the fact that you don't get to pee in 10 hours, or that you have colleagues who are, like, peeing in bottles in the middle of, like a field or something, or you are eating while driving all the time because you never get to take a lunch break. Just telling them about your job, telling about your day to day, telling. Them why this bill is important, how you're not able to get paid for follow up phone calls to doctor's offices to coordinate care and referrals for your patients, like all things that are critical, especially when you have patients who, like, have communication disorders, it's not so easy to tell them to, like, follow up with their provider, right? If they have AAC, you know, it's not so easy for them to log into my chart with like, two step verification and all that, to read a message or send a message to their provider. So doing those things is critical to getting them the care they need and making sure that they're followed up on and that there's good communication with the patient all their other providers. So we just went down there and explained all that to them, and we had some people, some legislators, who just nope, did not want to talk to us. You could tell they were not interested. That's okay. We've tried to tailor our message to to like which representatives we were talking to, so if they were in a rural area, we stressed, you know, the equity and access issues a pay per visit, and the impact on rural areas and rural communities. And, yeah, it was really good. We just so we did the mini Lobby Day, and then we did it at a bigger Lobby Day where we had more nursing colleagues, which was a great opportunity to educate our nursing colleagues about why this mattered so much for their interdisciplinary colleagues, like pts and therapists and stuff, and they were really receptive and supportive of us, too. So they lobbied on behalf of it with all their meetings. And then we prepared testimony. So several SLPs, PTs, nurses, OTs, we all wrote testimony. Unfortunately, we were a little disappointed we did not get to present it.