the support that we've done for people who are turning their lives around with programmes like delancey streets. and we have people who are former addicts out there working in communities to help support people who are struggling with addiction. in a sense, one of the points, i guess, of that particular story about that very unfortunate individual, it reflects on the crazy expense of property in san francisco for so many people. i don't disagree with that. it's so... it's utterly unaffordable. expensive, yeah. i mean, the average house price is well over $1 million. and the point is, it's changing the city. and maybe it's because the tech money came in so quickly and so much of it. but right now, if you're middle class, let alone struggling, in san francisco, you can't afford to buy a home in this city. more and more people are leaving. let me just take us back a little bit, because pretty much between 2010 and 2015, when we were starting to see significant rise in the tech industry in our city and providing tax incentives and other things to do so... ..we created eight newjobs for every one n