i am kathy luper. we own and run the cadillac hotel in the tenderloin. we bought the hotel as private owners. we did not exchange -- we did an exchange of buildings and turned the cadillac over to become a nonprofit. people thought we were crazy. who wants to live in the tenderloin? who will live here? you'll only have 20 residents. it is a 160-unit building and is full. we have a waiting list. we have waiting lists of people who are looking for affordable housing in the city. they're not all people with special use problems. they're not all mental patients, drug alex -- additsct, alcoholics. there no -- ordinary, everyday people who make $9 or $10 an hour and cannot afford to live anywhere else. if we start whittling away at these units of which are really a treasure, there really should be like landmarks that before you can take when you get away, you have to go through all kinds of hearings to do that. i think you need to think carefully. as i said, when we bought the cadillac, it was compared to a very cheap hot dog. now it is like filet mignon. ever