Let me look on the staffing mandate. We think the Chevron doctrine being gone away is going to help us with the the legal case. And, certainly, if the legal case depending on how that's decided, we think less legislatively, this is probably going to go away given the price tag on it and the effort by the Republican Party to cut costs. So we're very hopeful on the staffing mandate side as is ACA. In terms of what else could happen, you know, it's really too soon to tell. What exactly would would go on and what would be tasked congressionally. But if you think about block grants, I mean, there's been conversations about block grants for a long, long time. ACA would very much so push for some sort of per capita cap so that an if enrollment increases, they funding increases as well. And they would look for some sort of inflationary increases on the long-term care side plus some factor above that. So ACA is very involved in all of that and the lobbying effort. So we feel very good about, you know, what they would be able to accomplish. But, again, too soon to too soon to tell. But, again, as I mentioned, you know, we feel pretty good about where our coverages are. We feel good about the fact that we have a president who was very supportive of this industry during COVID. He really stepped up big time for us and really recognized that this in the industry is is too important to fail. So we we hope that that will continue and that understanding will continue and nothing draconian will happen. And then when we talk about you know, where the federal spending is, if you think about total Medicaid spending, over twenty-five percent of the Medicaid the federal portion of Medicaid spending is spent on Medicaid expansion, which is what came about via the Affordable Care Act. And so that covers non-elderly adults that do not have children. So that's over twenty-five percent of that spend. And that is that constitutes ninety percent of the federal government money is going towards Medicaid expansion expansion as opposed to sixty percent going towards the rest of Medicaid. So we really view that Medicaid expansion as being the low hanging fruit that's probably the first path. It doesn't mean that the rest of Medicaid isn't semi at risk, but we feel pretty good about the position that we're in.