. >> katie franklin, chair of the community advisory program for special education. this is progress, just to see a document that says students with inclusion can enter and apply at any school. i want to cry. but then i sober up when i listen to you guys talking about it. there is a bunch of things. attendance area schools. you know where these children live. you have their addresses. you know which schools are their attendance area schools. the system you use with siblings and -- perhaps inclusion could be another factor in making that work. i would like to meet with you to talk about some ideas i have about that. i do not know. i have been asking for inclusion at every school for seven years now. a lot of people i know have been doing it for 30 years. the law passed 35 years ago. 18 years after that, we got inclusion at west portal elementary school, at one school. a year later, 10 more schools had it. by 2004, 50 schools had it. now with these transition grades, all schools will theoretically have it. that is great. but the teachers are going to need the support.