at this time i will yield two minutes to the gentlewoman from ohio, ms. joyce beatty, to give remarks on this and other matters on the health in our community, as well as in america. mrs. beatty: mr. speaker, first i'd like to thank my colleague and friend, congresswoman plaskett, for leading tonight's congressional black caucus special order hour. first and certainly fitting to tonight's topic on mental health, i would like to salute the life and legacy of a giant in the health care industry who passed on november 10, bernard tyson. president and c.e.o. of kaiser perm nen day and friend. just this year he was talking to the editor in chief of fortune magazine about lessons learned and lessons that were worth remembering and now he has left them behind. and those lessons were about mental health. he was talking about in this health care system, we have a system of health care for the body and for the mind and he had integrated both into his system, and he had done it in a seamless and in a way that did not have stigma. so tonight i say, rest in peace, rest in p