I think it's an important measuring tool only because its numbers provide the numbers for us. It's a housing indicator of a core need and overcrowding. It's an employability measurement between unemployment rates and participation rates, income levels and education attainment. There are probably other successful or maybe more important data that could be made available. This is the data we have today, which is why we utilize it. It really helps to begin to compare where disparities exist across the country. We can share with the clerk our methodology for doing that.
On March 31st, 2010. See this statement in context.