Good morning, everyone. Hope your day's going well so far. I just wanted to touch on that this report is capturing activities for the unit from July to December, so it's a little bit out of date with current stats and numbers and that sort of stuff because we've had a few reschedules to get in front of you. So, I'll just start off with— just get this clicker— there we go. The 6 months from July to December are typically our busiest periods. It's when seasons change from winter to spring, more people are out enjoying their backyards, there's some noise issues that occur, freedom camping period is in that time as well. So, this is where our— unit gets incredibly busy. I'm not going to read all of the slides because that'll bore you all to death, but the freedom camping compliance season started on Labour weekend as it does every year, and for the Brighton area, and from 1st of December for the rest of the district, and that goes through to the 30th of April. So the freedom camping season actually finishes this week. And when I say that finishes, that's when we stop our proactive compliance response to Freedom Camping and we revert back to our reactive response to Freedom Camping complaints. The Alcohol Licensing Team start monitoring compliance for special events from mid-October. There were 8 events over the reporting period, and I've gone into them in more depth later in the report. Our LIM numbers peak over spring and summer as more houses are sold. And this year there was new laguama regulations that we had to enact before a certain date, but I've covered that off later as well. Environmental compliance investigations increased, and this is in line with our noise complaint numbers coming up over that time as well, with daylight saving kicking off. So food safety applications. The number of food safety applications has remained relatively consistent with the same reporting period of previous years. So we're not seeing a huge spike in more applications coming in, just a consistent level, which is fine. Just ask, what are the applications? Are people applying for a license to make food, or what? Yeah, yeah. So basically they're allowed to sell food. Yeah, okay, thank you. Noise complaints. So our noise complaints are tracking pretty consistently with previous years. At the time of reporting, our level of service was at 95.4%. We're currently, as of end of March, still sitting at 95.4%, so we're still achieving our target of 90% there, so that's really great. Environmental health. So what we've captured here in this graph is the top 10 types of complaints received by our environmental health team, and they are represented in the graphs as you can see. During the reporting period, complaints relating to rubbish and vermin were the highest volume received, and that is a bit of a seasonal thing with vermin moving around in the warmer time of year, and rubbish, and they were assessed under the Health Act. Rubbish complaints are considered, but they are assessed under the Litter Act, so not under health, environmental health as such. For enforcement action to be taken, there must be evidence of a clear risk to public health and/or objectively offensive condition affecting the surrounding area. The statutory threshold for intervention is high, where we have to demonstrate that the the effects of the property are injurious to health under the Health Act. So specialist advice. So the Environmental Health Team also provides specialist advice to our resource consenting and building consenting teams when a building consent is being processed. We also monitor compliance with the public health-related resource consent conditions. You'll see in the graphs there, there is a spike in around September, and that reflects when the new development contributions policy came in in 2025. So there's a lot of applications came in just before that new development contributions policy was adopted, and that has a flow-on effect into my team having to assess it for environmental advice that we have to do. So, LIM and property information. So, over the last 6 months, LIM requests have remained steadily with continued increases compared to previous years. We anticipate that the current trend in LIM volumes will continue for the foreseeable future. And as I mentioned earlier, the new legume legislation implementation, so this year, or in July 2025, the central government put in new regulations for all LIMs to contain all natural hazard information. So the council responded to this by standing up a project team from across all the businesses that feed into a LIM, and as a result, our LIMs now contain all known and detailed natural hazard information, and we supply links to reports held by us from Environment Canterbury, and we include a complete property file on our LIM requests now. There used to be two different distinct services, they're now grouped together. And so anyone who is putting in a LIM request, they get both the LIM and the property file as a matter of course. So our Alcohol Licensing Team. So we had the Local Alcohol Policy implementations. That was a big, big thing for our team to implement after the LAP was adopted. So there was a Phase 1 of the LAP that came into force on the 24th of August. This phase generally related to the restriction and freeze on opening of bottle stores in areas of high deprivation and in areas that contain sensitive sites. Phase 2 of the Local Alcohol Policy came into force on the 25th of October, and this phase related to the 9 PM closing time, which my team went out and hand-delivered and retrieved 140 licences. So we gave them the new one and took their old one so that they were compliant with the new LAP. And in December 2025, the District Licensing Committee hearing held its first application under the LAP process as well. And there's details as the outcome of that one there on the slide. The alcohol team were also very busy this year with special event monitoring. It began in mid-October. Typically, 2 licensing inspectors attend these events to ensure that no alcohol harm-related matters arise and to ensure the object of the Sale and Supply of Alcohol Act is complied with. The events that we attended was the Black Caps versus England, the Mystery Musical Festival in the Red Zone, Edington Cup Day, Rakuten Cup Day, South Island Beer Festival, Black Caps in Western Bays East, South Island Wine and Food Festival, and the Rolling Meadows in Bottle Lake. And after the reporting of this, also at Electric Ave and the other events that have continued on past the reporting period. Compliance investigations. So this is my team that monitor compliance against the Building Act, the bylaws, the RMA non-compliances, some health-related matters, which is sort of the— can be like hoarders, that sort of thing, and resource consent compliance as well. So there's been an increase in RMA-related complaints, and this increase directly correlated with the employment of my Compliance Officer who is responding to Airbnb or short-term accommodation workload at the moment. So as was presented a couple of weeks ago, I understand that, that was shared, the work that she is doing. So we have a good understanding of that, but that is proactive and reactive complaint response. So that's why you'll see an increase in complaint numbers because she generated some complaints in the system. There was also a notable increase in Local Government Act complaints, and they related to the local government election and signage, so a lot of signage. And we also ran a signage campaign twice over that period of time too, so that's not related to election signage, but it was related to signage promoting various things that were happening around the city and the signage was placed incorrectly. So we do 2 proactive signage complaints a year. Freedom camping. So freedom camping was well underway at the time of writing this report. It's well, nearly over, so, by the time I'm presenting. So self-contained vehicle compliance, I just thought I wanted to touch on that for you. So at this time, at the time of writing the report, both the blue and green warrant cards for self-contained private vehicles were permitted. This is a transition period. So people for privately owned vehicles was extended by the Minister, and now compliance was required by the 7th of June. So from the 7th of June, vehicles can be certified as self-contained under the green warrants requirements only. So over this season, we've been in a transition where we've had blue and green self-certification warrant certificates. As of the 7th of June, it will only be the green ones, so that will simplify a lot of things. And so a lot of this, as I mentioned, was covered off by a separate presentation really recently, so I won't cover off it again. But happy to cover off any questions at the end if you have some. Animal management. So our priority 1 complaints relate to dog attacks on people, animals, and wandering stock. Found dogs are also treated as a priority due to our philosophy of returning them home where possible. So we try and get them off the streets, prevent any further incidents occurring with them wandering, and get them back home to their owner. The target is 98% responded to within 15 minutes, which is a really difficult target given how big our geographical area is. The team do really well in this space, and we're currently sitting at 98.5% as of March, so that's good news. We've got our priority 2 complaint types within this category are barking dogs. As you can see, high number of complaints come in for barking dogs. But very consistent to previous years. Dog fouling, a lot less, as you see. Dogs rushing on their own property, so that's when dogs are on their property contained but they're rushing at fences when people are going past, that sort of thing. Dog welfare, lost dog, unregistered dogs, and wandering dogs. So, won't really go into those graphs, they sort of tell their own story there. We've got our education campaigns are still going strong. At the time of the report, we'd undertaken 17 education talks, 4 Dog Smart programs to schools, 13 Dog Safe programs to workplaces, and they're open to anyone who wants them. So any workplace who wants to engage with, they have to go onto properties, door knocking, that sort of thing, we are quite happy to have a program education talk with them so that the people are being safe when they're conducting their duties. And we have also conducted 8 reading to dogs sessions in the libraries. The shelter services, you can see the statistics there. Found dogs, there were 980 dogs, they were found and 668 were returned home to their owners. Impounded dogs, where 312 dogs were impounded. Returned dogs were 62, were successfully rehomed. So that's when they've been impounded, owners haven't come to claim them, they then get rehomed to their forever home from there. And then euthanased dogs, 23 were unable to be rehomed and were euthanized. Oh, what happened there? Went too far. Maybe not. Oh, there's a slide missing. My prosecution and enforcement slide. Jo, do you know if that's there or not? It's disappeared. Yeah, can you see it? That's fine. If you can see it, that's all we need. So as you can see, the team have been really busy in what I call the enforced and directed aspect of the VAD compliance model across a lot of different spectrums of the pieces of legislation that we administer on behalf of Council. So I won't go into the details on the page, but the team are doing a really, really good job out there. Our first approach is always to do the voluntary and assisted compliance, but whereby we can't achieve that, we have to go down the path of enforced and directed. And this is a reflection of the enforced and directed component of work that we do. Okay.