somewhere in the enabled of $1.2 billion, for taking this stuff and dumping it in uniontown, alabama. 100 feet from where people live. and i suggest, as is the case in the community that i am privileged to serve, where people that are friends of mine have died as a result of not coal ash but dumps being in their communities and incinerators burning it and that's the same in many respects. i compliment florida power and light, the largest utility in my state, for destroying their two coal ash plants in fort lauderdale and we still find that florida power and light manages their business well enough to make handsome profits and as far as electric rates going up, i would suggest to my friend, it's sort of like health care measures. and i continue to ask everybody, tell me today, before there was anything called obamacare, tell me today that your insurance rates for health went down. tell me today that your utilities went down. i don't recall any period where that happened. and somewhere along the line we need to address these things in meaningful ways. different standards in each state p