ms. cutler, this seems to be low-hanging fruit. this is a very minimal in terms of it is still costly but it's minimal, but it's something we have that we can see some positive results from very quickly. so we are not criminalizing and forcing people to move and have their vehicles towed. as was shown in the presentation, the cost of housing has gotten so much that this is an option that's become more readily used. and this is not a san francisco phenomenon, let's say that for the record. go down to palo alto, all the way up to the east bay, and the professor, i know we didn't spend a lot of time on it, but the professor that came in, this is a phenomenon that is happening all over the country. so the two-thirds rise of homelessness in san francisco is not unique to san francisco. but what is unique to san francisco is we were behind in terms of moving forward in this model. this model is used differently in other locales. what we have tried to do here, and i think you sped through it in the presentation is we are not just allowing