I think this idea of toxic heritage is sometimes a little bit hard to wrap your brain around. But ultimately, it's about human rights, that everybody deserves the right to live in a safe, healthy place, and people should care about it regardless of where they live because our history has been such that not everybody has equal access to safe healthy places. So raising up the stories of the neighborhoods that have borne burden after burden over decades, where it's the places where we cite our dumps, where polluted soils and contaminants are allowed to accumulate because they are places with maybe less political power, that those are stories that we really need to tell and everybody needs to care about so that we can move forward to create more equitable and safe and healthy neighborhoods for everyone. So for the Indi toxic Heritage project, we are collaborating with a number of partners, including Indie Parks and Recreation and the Keffer Institute, and, of course, the Museum Studies Program to create an exhibition that looks at environmental harm and advocacy for change in Indianapolis. There are a number of organizations and individuals who have been doing very important environmental justice work in our city. But often the stories of environmental damage and advocacy are concentrated in specific neighborhoods or with specific groups that are involved in those initiatives. What we're going to be doing is connecting those dots to tell a story that really points to toxic heritage as part of Indianapolis city wide history, identity, and future. Our city has a long history, and a lot of it is very industrial and very commercial, and that has left scars on the environment. A lot of people think about the environment as something separate from the human world, and that distinction is a fallacy. We live in the natural environment. The human world is built on the natural environment and in the natural environment. So anything that's going on in the quo natural world affects the human world. We also understand that these impacts that have been left on the natural environment, in our community, in our city, they don't just affect the trees and the soil and the birds and the bees. They affect us as well. And so any project that allows us to have more awareness of the makeup of the environment, the potential that it has, the threats that it holds, ways that anything that increases our agency to change and influence that, anything that does that is a benefit. And so I feel like we're part of it because we've all worked so well together in the past, because our philosophical underpinning is community engagement. It is also about doing a very best job to research, investigate and to show the community, but it's to involve the community and putting that information together. So that then the community comes and sees themselves reflected in the work that they've done. And then they take it around to show it to others, which encourages others to and this is if it is to be, it is up to us, and it starts with engagement and sensitivity of the mess of which I'm prowsing one.