The hospitalization rate is down. I was speaking to Michael and they’re — that’s what he’s seeing in his hospital system. That’s what emergency rooms across the state are saying. So the recent news is good — we are on the other side of the plateau and the numbers are coming down. But that’s good news only compared to the terrible news that we were living with, which is that constant increase. And remember, you still have 1,300 people who walked into the hospitals yesterday testing positive. So it’s no time to get cocky and it’s no time to get arrogant, right? We still have a long way to go and a lot of work to do. And this virus has been ahead of us every step of the way. We have been playing catch-up from day one in this situation. So it is no time to relax. And this is only halftime in this entire situation. We showed that we can control the beast. And when you close down, you can actually slow that infection rate. But it’s only halftime. We still have to make sure that we keep that beast under control, we keep that infection rate down, we keep that hospitalization rate down, as we now all get very eager to get on with life and move on. So it’s not over. And in this second phase, first do no harm. Don’t jeopardize what you’ve already accomplished by seeing that infection rate increase. We have to be smarter, especially when it comes to the new frontier of testing and how we test and how aggressively and how we get that organized. And then when we talk about rebuilding we have to talk about not just rebuilding, but let’s learn from this horrific experience. And let’s take these lessons forward — and how do we build back better than before?