We thought you were there installing phones.
This is to Ms. Barnes, if I have some time left, Mr. Chair.
Is it two minutes? Thank you.
Another thing that has touched me personally is your presentation. Some of my colleagues know that I have a niece who is deaf—not born deaf, but who went deaf before she gained speech. We learned a lot through that process. She has a cochlear implant that doesn't help. She went through a lot that wasn't able to help her. She doesn't speak and she doesn't hear, partly because of struggles with the deaf culture. It took so long to diagnose her. A lot of people don't like to talk about the deaf culture in our society, but it's there. Some people see it as a gift, and some people don't want someone who is without hearing to ever be able to communicate. How do we get past that struggle?