amy: that issue, jacqueline patterson, of what the president pushing, the issue of coal jobs?> yes. as i was saying at the very beginning, but the labor industry and the market say it is not necessarily one to bring back coal. i was saying implications it would be if it did increase coal -based energy production in the u.s. there is the other side of the fact that even if we are exporting coal and other countries are using coal, as we know, any use of coal burning to produce energy affects climate change overall. we know community's of color are more likely to feel the impact from climate change. so whether it is communities that have poor housing, under insured, communities whose homes are located in the floodplains, we see these communities are disproportionately vulnerable to, change the more likely to be impacted by climate change. we know they are often the ones that are -- don't have access to healthy and nutritious foods. they have food insecurity. we know the shifts in agricultural yields is another impact of climate change. this might make food insecurity even greater