The other thing we ought to do with Tangier I think is, let's explore different technologies for stopping this sea level rise erosion. Let's explore it. And they would like a sea wall. They built a sea wall on the west side of the island in 1987 or 8 that's had some positive effect. They would like a similar wall on the northeast quadrant to do the same thing. And I think they have a fairly good argument with two bits of evidence. One, on the west side, it worked. Second, there is a Chesapeake Bay Foundation island that's like 600 yards off Tangier called Port Isabel. The Chesapeake Bay Foundation has paid for a combination, as I've boated around it, some sea walls but also some - you go off the shore maybe 50 or 100 yards and there are some bulkheads that are kind of put up intermittently to reduce wave action - and it seems to have worked.

So we're in dialogue. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has expressed some interest in part of Tangier because it's very thick with migratory birds. We're in dialogue with them. We're in dialogue with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation about how they did what they did and what it cost and has it worked. And if we're going to have a discussion about an infrastructure bill, for example, I would hope that we would put monies into an infrastructure bill to help communities deal with resilience from storm events. And look, they're going to be grappling with this from Houston down to Corpus Christi. They're grappling with this in Louisiana. Miami Beach is grappling with it. Norfolk is grappling with it. How do you make investments that are resilience investments? And I think there are some strategies that we could use in Tangier that because of the size of the island it's limited, but you could really learn some things from it that could be helpful.