jed holton for the 350 bay area. and it is nice to be here and to see everyone. i look forward to diving more into this process and these numbers. i've never really paid attention to our city's capital planning before. i'm curious if, you know, 3.25% -- people don't like having a lot of debt, but they also complain a lot about the city. if that were jacked up to 3.50, if we were able to meet our backlog substantially earlier than 2027. to the specific issues of clean power s.f., and a local buildout of renewables and efficiency, i noticed in the plan document that renewable development was getting a million a year in the capital plan, and energy-efficiency was getting a million a year also. that's what it looked like in the sheet that was shown. i guess to eric's point, a million a year for renewables, and a million a year for efficiency is better than zero, but in terms of looking at a long-term strategic, what we actually need, what we want, it is, of course, not remotely meeting those. so i think this really is -- this information is what we need to kind of pr