haney, by way of a little bit of background, a long time ago, in these chambers in 2002, supervisor mark lenofirst inclusionary law which required a certain percentage of housing and new construction to be affordable, and over the years that number changed and went up. in 2012, and what i always thought was an ill-fated deal between the mayor's office and advocates, they actually put -- they lowered the percentage and put it in the charter where the board of supervisors could not adjust it, and i think at my first meeting back on the board in december of 2015, i introduced a charter amendment with supervisor jane kim to take it out of the charter, and that led us to our current inclusionary regimen that we now have, and at some point, supervisor breed, kim and i figured out the roadmap to peace , and that has kind of been the lay of the land ever since, that there has been an outstanding issue as it relates to collection of fees for state bonus -- the state density bonus projects, and in 2017, we had amendments to capture that, but when we cut our branch deal, we had a category of projects th