I do appreciate the discretion, Chair. I've just been listening along in my office. For a day where you're giving out $4.1 million of grants, this does not feel like a particularly happy meeting, and I don't think anyone in this room is feeling particularly great right now. I appreciate this is not fun. What brought me here though was— I don't want to call it naivety, but I heard some of the comments about looking at needing to increase the funding, which, yes, but— and I think it's best for me to talk while community organisations are in the room to just be really frank about the legislative change that is in front of us. The government's definition of core services under the Simplifying Local Government Act bill: network infrastructure, public transport, waste management minimisation, civil defence, emergency management, libraries, museums, reserves, and other community and recreational facilities. That's it. That is what local councils do under the government's proposed reforms. So let's firstly have that on our radar. Second, rates capping. We've gone through $10 million of savings through the Rate Revenue and Financial Working Group. We've heard through our annual plan hearings the pleas to not proceed with some of those funding cuts. That was $10 million. We need to add another $17.5 million to come in at the very top of the rates cap ban that the government are putting in front of us. I don't want to give false hope that this council can meet the obligations of community organisations when— and it is a cruel irony because their funding sources outside of council have been drying up because of other governments decisions, but I just came in here almost— I just want to be really frank that unless there is a substantive change in Parliament or direction at the election, this next grants meeting will probably be the worst one ever, and we will be going declining and declining and declining, and that is the reality of the legislative change that has been put in front of councils right now. And I'm sorry to come in and be— I feel like the Grim Reaper, but I just, I heard the conversation, I heard the So the optimism of, you know, we need to find more funding. You're not core services according to the government. I completely, inherently disagree with that. That is bullshit. But that is what is being put in front of us. And so, sorry to come into grants and to play that, but I just felt it was so important to be contextual because November determines the ability of this and all councils to respond to community organisations who can do environmental protection, social harm reduction, and helping people so much better than we ever can, because they do the hard mahi, they're on the ground, they know the people in the communities, they show up and they have been there and they do it on the smell of an oily rag. I'll leave it there. Thank you, Chair.