A: Again, the idea [is] that those folks are out there. We have to get them off the streets, but getting them off the streets by putting them in jail — as the [economic impact] study from 2014 shows — that's not a solution. That person's going to be back there a few days later after they're released from jail. What I tell a business owner like that is to go look at Lincoln Road in Miami. … Miami, by the numbers, has reduced homelessness by 91 percent over the past 10 years. You look at how that impacted Lincoln Road in Miami – if you've been to Miami lately, Lincoln road now is this beautiful Mall of Millenia outdoors. Nice shops, restaurants — it's a tourism mecca in Miami. The amount of homeless people there 10 or 15 years ago — you could not do an outdoor mall in Lincoln Road in Miami the way that they do it now. But they invested dollars. They didn't try to arrest away the problem. They invested dollars. It took time. But now, the economic impact of getting "that guy" you are referring to off the streets far exceeds any costs of paying to help that person get off the streets into an apartment of their own. So at the end of the day, again I would say that the bigger issue for me on the Osceola ordinance was that it shows that ultimately there was a wrong belief to put that ordinance in place. If we believe that the answer is arresting that person, in a way we are saying that person has done something wrong. And we have now again shifted the blame from society's inability to help the least among us to the blame being put on a person who, I'm telling you right now, if they're living on the streets, they probably have a mental illness or physical disability. That's what our data has told us. So again, I'm hoping that Osceola County is going to, again as Commissioners Arrington and Janer said, look at a more comprehensive approach to helping citizens. And by the way, I will say one more thing. When you drive someone off the sidewalk in Osceola County, where are they doing to go? They're going to get on the bus and go to Orange County, city of Orlando, Seminole County. So in a way, it's also disappointing because in a regional partnership that we've tried to do on homelessness, shifting homeless folks to another part of the region is not necessarily a solution either.