in 2012, when we had three supervisors on the board of supervisors, myself, david campos, and christina olague, we said say, we're not grappling with the needs of the lgbtq community. so we created a wonderful task force that spent 1.5 years to craft a report presented to the board of supervisors on what we can do to address those years. we started methodically passing legislation and seeking funds in the budget to start implementing those recommendations. i know recently, we all announced, and the departments announced, and you announced that the bulk of these recommendations have been largely or entirely implemented, and it was great, but there's still a lot of work to do. one of the pieces of legislation we passed was finally started to collect data from city funded and city programs on lgbtq people using these services or not using these services. we as a community, as you noted historically have often either unintentionally or intentionally been invisible. no data collected, no one bothering to ask the questions, and when we don't ask the questions, we don't get the services that we need