probably the most important part of this whole letter, she says, "this has us terrorized -- or tear fierksd he shoulterrifies, i sh. i'm reading it wrong. "this has us terrified." and so it would. any parent who has a peace of mind when they fall asleep at night they don't have to worry about whether their children have health insurance. but if -- if we don't do the right thing here, she will have that sense of terror. she says this as she concludes the letter: "it would help us tremendously if you could support keeping the children's health insurance provisions intact which would, in turn, support families like ours." and that's what i've done by way of an amendment to our bill to make sure that we strengthen what the house did and strength eneven our own bill. our children's health insurance amendment, which i won't go through today, is strengthens and safeguards the program through 2019 and beyond to address any changes that health care reform may bring. we'll talk more about it. but this is the key. to make sure we have not just a set of benefits for children that are directly tied to t