rainier, north cascades, olympic, those kinds, the northern tier, we're seeing a very well-documented shift in rain on snow, which would typically happen in the spring. historically, it's just been a positive trend. you have these big snow packs. it rains in the spring. the snow is so big, it's like a big sponge. it sort of soaks up all that rain and lets it out through the spring which is essential to not only the environment but agriculture communities down below, portable water systems. that rain now is now happening in the fall instead of the spring. very documented, scientifically based shift. and the result is there's no snow pack, so it's just heavy rains and it's washing out systems, washing out millions of dollars of infrastructure, road systems, all of that. so we're really beginning in our planning process to plan for climate change. plan for sea level rise. where we locate facilities. what kind of facilities we put in as we replace those that are lost as a result of this kind of damage is all part of our planning agenda for parks. >> you mentioned money. this is not going