amy: nihar bhatt, your response? >> i could not agree more. what we have seen -- in oakland in general, the bay area, there have been thousands of evictions a year. the scale of the housing crisis is something that is well known worldwide in the bay area. what has become epidemic in san francisco has bled into oakland in a really dramatic way. that is something that affects all kinds of people. within the artist community, in the case of the work was spaces for artists, you see this dramatically. there are so many spaces that have been evicted, evicted in the last few years. the 1990 market street in oakland, lost in recent times. it is just one symptom of it but it has an effect on all kinds of things. in this case, it drove people into a space that i think had -- it was a compromise. i think a lot of people were conscious that it was not the safest place because of some specific factors about it. nobody understood the scale of how unsafe it would end up being. i don't think anyone could have predicted how bad this tragedy would be. but it is