When I mentioned California, I said they took a number of different approaches to even address this problem, so even though I have referenced that jurisdiction they didn't think that their normal statistics and data collection would get the answers they needed about the barriers to accessing clean energy and this kind of thing.
The kinds of things I mentioned around structural barriers, access to capital, home ownership rates, and complex needs, it's a question of whether the data is being collected in sufficient detail so that you can do the cross-correlation between the demographic and the factor you're interested in. Yes, we might have overall numbers on home ownership. Have we got good numbers tying that to not only low-income families but also to how that is translating into their energy cost? It's this kind of multi-layered analysis.