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From YouTube: Boston Home Center CPA & Mortgage Announcement
Description
Mayor Walsh joins Mass Affordable Housing and the Boston Home Center to announce major investments aimed at allowing more Boston residents to afford their first homes.
B
A
A
Boston
has
portability
prices.
Do
you
mean
I
think
by
changing
before
our
eyes,
turn
longtime,
neighbors
and
friends
are
being
priced
out.
Our
families
are
being
split
up
far
away
granted
we're
working
hard.
Some
of
us
would
to
what
be
jumped
in
yet
we
still
can't
afford
to
live
you
at
the
march
on
Washington.
What
was
the
King
talked
about
the
fierce
urgency
of
now.
A
A
A
E
E
F
F
I
have
been
working
with
people
for
the
past
seven
years.
My
furniture
requires
me
to
be
a
Muslim
president
in
order
to
fulfill
my
basic
needs,
a
heart
to
think
another
job
to
meet
enemy
at
the
immigrant,
an
English
language
learner
and
a
member
of
the
Dorchester
community.
I
am
aware
of
the
challenges
you
think
and
how,
in
my
role
that
you
weren't
her
I
tried
to
be
the
supportive
dome,
I
would
have
clear
when
I
was
the
age
I
want
to
be
here.
F
I
want
to
continue
to
make
an
impact
on
the
lives
of
young
people.
I
want
to
continue
to
contribute
to
the
development
of
my
community.
I
also
want
to
own
a
home,
so
I
would
be
more
stable
and
secure.
We
large
expected
by
15
what
we
never
complained
about.
The
community
reservation
happened.
Then
we
continued
it
with
a
big
event.
Asked
you
where
a
debauch
PD
counselors
and
the
mayor's
chief
of
house
committed
to
the
goal
of
increasing
affordable,
homeownership
opportunities.
F
B
F
G
G
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
I
I
B
I
I
Tonight,
you're
sending
message
loud
and
clear
to
those
poor
women
just
to
oppose
our
efforts,
we're
celebrating
our
victories
but
were
not
done.
The
resources
we
won
are
substantial
and
an
important.
The
city
has
built
up
reserve,
thousands
of
affordable
rental
and
ownership
homes,
and
the
one
mortgage
has
held
over
21,000.
I
J
Everyone
well,
my
name
is
Sydney
Marui
at
education
professionals
and
also
independent
consultants.
I
grew
up
in
Trinidad,
but
I
have
lived
in
Boston
on
about
20
years.
I
would
like
to
be
able
to
disappoint
any
place
where
I
started
my
family,
the
place
where
I
provide
affordable
childcare
to
my
neighbors
have
enough
about
matter.
Will
allow
me
to
tailor
my
myface
to
be
the
cleanest
of
the
children
and
families
I
serve.
It
will
be
good
for
the
kids.
It
would
help
you
with
driving
business
right
now.
J
B
A
I
J
A
F
G
A
A
A
A
30
seconds
the
thing
is
we
gotta
go
so
far
beyond
what
I
like
to
do
that
in
war
cause.
We
know
many
of
us
like
equals
revenue
generating
those.
None
of
that
is
one
no,
and
there
are
a
lot
of
assets,
land
assets
across
the
state,
and
we
have
to
free
those
odds
and
make
sure
that
I
hustle
authority
to
commutative.
So
there
are
bills
for
that
as
well.
A
A
K
K
Just
want
to
add
one
other
thing,
I'm
very
happy
that
this
is
happening
and
it's
incredibly
important
to
see
the
faces
that
I
see
here
and
to
feel
the
sense
of
commitment.
That's
here,
because
a
number
of
years
ago,
I
had
to
deal
with
watching
a
constituent
who
was
working
with
city
life,
who
some
of
you
know
of
because
she
was
being
evicted
from
her
home
because
of
the
bank
foreclosure
on
her.
None
of
us
knew
what
else
to
do
so.
K
City
life
organized
the
blockade,
so
I
went
that
blockade
and
I
was
arrested,
spent
a
few
hours
in
jail,
but
it
was
the
only
thing
I
could
do
and
I
felt
like
I
had
to
do
that,
because
there
were
no
other
answers.
What
I'm,
seeing
and
hearing
about
tonight
is
that
there
are
going
to
be
other
answers
and
I
can
go
back
to
the
Statehouse
and
tell
my
colleagues.
We
have
to
do
this
work
now.
L
L
Want
to
let
you
all
know
that
right
here
you
have
to
tell
the
creation
of
2015,
we
believe
it
affordable
housing,
but
we
believe
it
like.
The
council
just
cause
addiction.
We
we
I
mean
obviously
first
punch
meeting
those
girls
look
forward
to
supporting
those
girls
as
they
go
through
the
State
House
good.
As
we
know
the
importance
of
affordable
housing.
You
know
when
I'm,
not
at
the
State
House
I
work
as
a
position
at
Boston,
Medical,
Center
and
so
many
times
ask
my
patients
that
how
can
we
improve
your
health
with
so
many
times?
I
M
Folks
that
call
Boston
their
home,
creating
a
flexibility
for
the
linkage
program
is
a
tool
that
we
need
to
ensure
that
our
neighbors
feel
safe
and
secure
in
their
homes
and
to
continue
to
work
towards
closing
the
income
inequality
gap.
So
therefore,
that
there's
one
reason
why
I
support
the
program
for
the.
E
M
E
M
F
N
A
N
Get
up
the
building
soon
as
possible,
we
make.
It
include
the
legislature.
Of
course,
I
do
want
to
thank
maja
and
tell
you
when
the
governor
makes
the
announcement
says
that
is
that
I
had
a
strong
part
to
do
with
that.
I
can
tell
you.
It
is
the
meeting
that
I
had
with
maja
that
helped
to
set
me
off
to
get
me
into
that
angry
mode.
N
This
is
something
we
need
to
do
so
when
he
thanks
me,
I'm
thanking
you,
because
that
meeting
with
the
20
residents
from
my
district
is
what
educated
me
to
make
me
even
stronger
when
I
have
that
meaning
and
that
meaning
is
not
just
me.
I
can't
lead
on
the
subject
unless
I
have
all
of
us
together.
So
it's
all
the
black
and
Latino
caucus.
We
have
a
meeting
so
long.
N
We
were
all
we
were
all
in
the
middle
of
a
decision.
I
was
gonna
vote
for
something
and
whether
that
we're
going
to
raise
the
taxes,
but
some
of
us
stayed
in
the
room
and
continue
this
fight.
So
as
represented
Amalia
talked
about,
we
have
been
a
serious
fight.
We've
been
in
this
fight
since
the
major
crash
around
foreclosures
and
I
must
say
to
you.
However,
though,
all
right
past
my
30
seconds,
I
want
as
a
legislator
to
be
in
a
city
that
everyone
wants
to
live
in,
and
so
I
want
to
continue
to
everything.
N
I
can
around
education,
Public,
Safety
transportation
and
all
those
things
that
we
think
are
so
important
that
the
whole
world
wants
Olivia,
but
we
have
to
still
not
get
displaced
and
that's
what
this
is
all
about.
Maybe
in
here
when
many
people
were
running
out
of
literally
means
we
were
running
out
in
the
video
now
they're
running
back
to
the
city.
Let's
make
sure
we
don't
come
here.
O
O
We
in
our
office
experienced
more
than
70%
of
constituent
cases
having
to
deal
with
homelessness,
in
fact,
just
as
yesterday,
I'm
working
with
a
family
of
seven
who
are
trying
to
figure
out
how
they're
gonna
get
house
right
now,
but
the
grace
of
a
church
member
who
took
the
men
temporarily.
So
this
is
the
type
of
things
that
we
mostly
deal
with
in
our
office.
O
We
understand
the
seriousness
of
housing
and
displacement
in
our
district
and
we
stand
wholeheartedly
with
Maha
to
make
sure
that
nobody
in
Boston
needs
to
be
displaced
as
the
city,
who
is
the
capital
and
the
light
to
the
United
States,
the
founding
of
this
nation.
We
stand
with
the
community
to
ensure
that
no
one
from
Boston
needs
to
be
displaced.
Let
us
not
become
like
San
Francisco,
where
you
need
to
be
making
165
thousand
dollars
to
be
able
to
afford
your
city.
We
stand
behind
the
community.
A
D
D
So
the
re
we
need
all
the
portable
housing
we
can
get
it
right
and
we
haven't
all
gave
up
strategy
when
it
comes
to
funding
while
below
after
developers
to
contribute
more,
are
also
organizing
support
for
another
composer
that
would
expand
the
housing
time
tremendously.
In
Boston,
we
have
three
extraordinary
women
leading
the
charge
against
some
very
common
interests
and
they're.
D
C
D
B
K
B
D
K
So
I
told
you
before
that
I
had
an
experience
that
I'll
never
forget
and
I
was
arrested
because
I
couldn't
do
anything
else
for
my
constituent,
who
had
been
a
perfectly
good
tenant
and
had
tried,
struggled
an
enormous
ly
to
be
able
to
work
her
way
out
of
her
fiscal
problems.
The
bank
refused,
she
didn't
get
there.
So
this
year,
I've
been
presented
with
an
opportunity
to
file
what
we're
calling
property
excise
tax
proposal.
K
B
P
I
come
today
all
the
way
from
the
other
side
of
the
city.
East
Boston
is
anybody.
We
need
to
be
in
the
house
any
easy
folks.
There
we
go
a
child
town,
Martha's
mother,
this
part
of
my
district
anyway.
I'll,
be
brief.
The
fact
that
matter
is
I'm
incredibly
hopeful
when
I'm
in
rooms
like
this,
because
I
know
for
a
fact
and
I'm
always
reminded
that
we
didn't
get
here
by
accident
right
where
we
are
right
now
in
a
speculative
market,
where
a
lot
of
us
are
being
displaced.
P
P
P
Yes
I'm,
the
chair
of
Housing
and
Community
Development
for
the
city
of
Boston,
but
I
sit
there
listening
constantly
to
folks
who
are
struggling
to
stay
here
and
that's
why
myself
of
containing
to
introduce
the
transfer
fee,
our
version
of
the
fee
would
actually
put
in
a
6%
transfer
fee
3%
on
the
buyer
and
the
seller,
excluding
all
homeowners.
These
are
just
folks
are
about
speculating
in
our
neighborhoods.
These
are
just
about
folks
flipping
in
our
neighborhoods
and
the
combined
total
of
the
flipping
of
24
up
to
25%
and
this
bad.
P
Working
will
continue
to
go
and
we
can
expand
the
pie.
The
fact
the
matter
is,
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
have
the
resources
and
the
resources
are
there
and
the
money
is
there
just
not
coming
to
us
and
that's
what
this
is
going
to
do.
I
want
to
make
sure
that
we
also
understand
that
this
is
about
a
bigger
issue
of
equity
and
income
inequality
and
yes,
it's
the
fact
we
need
to
own
our
own
future
and
the
only
way
you're
going
to
do
that
owning
your
own
homes.
P
That's
how
you
stay
that
time.
You
stopped
this
place.
I
want
to
thank
my
colleague,
and
this
is
Augie
George
for
the
work
we've
been
doing
on
the
pilot
program,
but
I
also
wanted
to
put
in
a
shout
out
for
the
Holmes
Act
another
piece
of
legislation,
almost
lots
of
other
folks
here
on
this
stage
at
the
Statehouse.
This
is
about
eviction,
sealing
and
allowing
people
to
move
on
with
their
lives.
H
Thank
you
so
much
so.
First
I
just
want
to
thank
you.
My
take
a
look
around.
Look
in
this
room.
Look
at
your
neighbor
to
the
left
and
to
the
right
look
behind
you.
People
look
at
this
stage.
There's
some
power
here
on
the
stage,
but
the
real
power
is
out
here.
The
real
power
is
in
this
room
and
it's
you
guys
we're
going
to
solve
this
crisis
because
of
you.
So
thank
you.
H
Mom
for
convening
us
I
want
to
thank
my
good
friend
and
colleague,
councillor
Edwards
for
her
partnership
and
her
leadership
on
this
transfer
fee
that
we
had
I
want
to
thank
my
colleagues
at
the
state
for
their
work
because
it
takes
all
of
us
to
do
this
together,
I'm
pleased
and
proud
to
represent
district
7,
we're
in
district
7
right
now.
So
welcome
and
one
of
the
top
issues
that
I
hear
from
constituents
is
about
displacement
and
and
the
staff
in
my
office.
H
We
have
to
constantly
work
with
residents
so
that
they
can
stay
in
their
homes.
We
are
in
crisis,
but
we
already
know
that
the
question
now
becomes.
What
are
we
going
to
do?
You
heard
my
colleague
Lydia
say
we
didn't
get
here
by
accident,
so
we've
got
to
be
intentional
about
the
strategies
and
solutions
that
we
put
forth.
H
That
will
help
us
solve
this
housing
crisis
and
make
sure
that
we
can
stay
in
our
community,
and
so
I
am
just
so
grateful
for
your
work
here
for
you
being
here,
for
you
helping
us
get
this
done.
This
transfer
fee,
as
you've
already
heard,
would
create
fees
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars.
Let
me
say
that
again,
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
that
we
can
invest
and
the
creation
and
of
affordable
housing
in
our
city.
H
It
also
creates
a
disincentive,
though,
for
the
those
who
want
to
come
in
and
speculate
and
flip,
and
do
all
these
crazy
things
that
drive
the
market
up.
So
it
creates
that
disincentive,
which
is
important
so
we're
just
talking
about
a
transfer
fee
of
the
6%
on
the
2
million
property,
the
2
million
dollar
properties
and
up
to
25%
on
the
transfers,
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
that
we
could
do.
We
need
your
support
to
get
it
through
the
council.
We
need.
A
B
Q
Thank
you
so
long,
Oh
am
I,
not
speaking
yeah,
okay,
Thank,
You,
Simone
and
I
want
to
thank
everyone
in
my
house
for
the
great
work
that
you
do.
I
want
to
thank
everyone
for
being
here
tonight.
I
want
to
thank
the
elected
officials
that
are
on
the
stage
one
a
thankful
legislative
delegation
from
the
State
House.
That's
working
on
some
incredible
piece
of
legislation
and
I
want
to
thank
the
City
Council.
Who
are
it's
an
incredible
legislation
we're
going
to
get
to
the
Statehouse
I,
wonder
what
I
know.
Dan
Cullinan
is
on
his
way.
Q
There's
another
bill
that
we
filed
a
not
guaranteed
tenants
first
rider
refusal.
That
means,
if
somebody's
selling
you
a
home
and
you're
attending
there
and
you
can't
afford
to
buy
and
you
won't
get
a
non-profit.
We
get
the
nonprofit
to
help
you
buy
that
house
and
it's
a
way
to
keep
houses
in
the
neighborhoods
and
the
hands,
enable
people
and
that's
another
piece
of
legislation
that
is
out
there.
That
is
so
important
that
we
have.
Q
I
want
to
congratulate
the
first
time
new
homeowners
out
here
tonight.
I
want
to
thank
you
for
your
great
work.
Congratulations,
those
who
had
taken
first-time
homebuyers
classes!
Congratulations
too,
because
it's
a
step
in
the
right
direction.
I'm
gonna
talk
about
the
money
in
a
second
I
just
want
to
take
a
minute.
I
was
sitting
back
here,
listening
thinking
about
an
opportunity
to
buy
your
first
home
and
I
grew
up
in
Dorchester,
I
still
live
there,
but
my
mother
and
father
in
1967
bought
the
house
on
top
Street.
Q
My
mother
and
my
father
died
years
ago.
My
mother
still
lives
there
and
they
pay
17,500
for
the
house
in
1967
and
the
reason
why
they
wanted
three
family
in
1967
is
so
they
couldn't
afford
the
mortgage
and
they
bought
the
three
family,
because
the
two
rents
other
rents
help
subsidize
the
mortgage
payment
for
the
day
has
amazing
and
for
years
the
tenants
in
our
house
pay
the
same
rent
for
years.
Q
They
were
there
forever
and
I
always
dreamed
of
when
I
was
younger,
that
I
want
to
buy
my
own
home
live
in
my
own
house.
It's
important
for
me
to
get
my
own
house
and
my
life
was
on
the
track.
Till
I
guess
do
something
and
then
in
1995
I
found
myself
in
detox
when
I
was
in
that
detox
I
realized.
My
life
was
spiraled
out
of
control.
Q
I
wasn't
there,
because,
because
I
was
the
best
drinker
in
the
world
that
wasn't
there
because
I
was
there
because
I
was
a
disaster
and
I
also
had
and
I
haven't
talked
about.
This
I
also
had
about
$30,000
a
day.
It's
what
I
used
to
do
when
I
didn't
have
any
money
when
I
was
drinking
I'd
bring
my
credit
card
to
the
bar
and
I
thrown
up
on
the
bar.
Q
My
life
started
to
turn
around,
but
I
had
this
debt
and
I
was
one
to
buy
a
house
and
I
always
talk
to
myself.
I'll
never
be
able
to
buy
a
house
and
in
1999
I
like
that
stay
representative
and
I
was
still
broke,
good,
still,
digging
yourself
out
of
a
hole
when
you
own
$30,000,
you
don't
make
it
up
overnight
and
we
weren't
making
big
money
as
replicas.
You
don't
and
I
went
to
our
house.
There
was.
There
was
a.
There
was
a
seal
going
on
in
a
house
in
Sabadell
and
I.
Q
Remember
going
to
the
house
with
my
father:
who's
live
at
the
time
and
I
walked
in
the
house.
It
was
a
fixer-upper.
The
house
was
not
you
couldn't
live
in
the
house
and
I
walked
inside
and
I
looked
around
that
it
was
an
estate,
sale
and
I
started
to
think
that
myself
I
want
to
buy
this
house,
but
how
am
I
gonna
buy
it.
So
when
the
lawyer
came
my
father's
negotiating
me,
a
guy
from
islands
who'd
be
had
a
sixth
grade
education
and
it
was
the
first
time
I
saw
him
kind
of
used.
Q
His
skills
and
I
was
pretty
impressed
that
my
old
Irish
father,
who
was
in
there
negotiate
for
me
I,
never
thought
like
I,
never
I
didn't
see
him
in
that
light.
That
way,
anyway,
we
were
able
to
buy
the
house.
I,
remember
walking
out
of
the
driveway
thinking
to
myself.
I
was
getting
in
my
car
I'm
thinking
myself.
How
am
I
gonna
pay
for
this
because
I
didn't
have
money
in
the
bank
for
a
down
payment?
Are
you
going
through
the
city
of
Boston
search,
the
first-time
homebuyer
program?
Q
B
Q
Am
I
gonna
do
this,
because
I
was
not
prepared
for
this
at
this
point
and
I
tell
you
that
story
does
not
everyone
has
somebody
can
give
you
a
check
for
$10,000,
but
what
it
made
me
think
of
as
a
young
legislator.
The
time
we
need
to
do
more
to
help
people
prepare
themselves
to
be
able
to
buy
that
dream.
I
own
that
house
for
16
years.
Q
It
was
a
true
family.
I
had
a
tenant
that
moved
in
the
house
was
my
first
tenant.
He
was
the
its
life
so
vows.
His
rent
was
the
same
because
I
didn't
need
to
me:
wasn't
about
making
money
while
paying
the
mortgage
and
for
me
every
time
I
walked
in
that
house
or
anytime
I
sat
in
the
back
deck
or
every
time
I
picked
a
weed
out
of
the
yard
or
every
time
I
shovel,
the
sidewalk
or
I
swept
the
gutter.
Whatever
I
did
I
realized.
This
was
mine
and
I
thought
to
myself.
Q
This
is
mine,
and
it
was
something
that
made
me
very
proud
and
I
see
that
suit
tonight,
because
that
dream
is
going
to
be
attainable
for
people.
We
are
gonna
make
sure
that
that
dream
is
obtainable.
That's
why
we're
doing
everything
we
do
in
the
City
of
Austin
home
ownership
is
certainly
how
we
built
the
middle
class.
There's
no
question
about
it.
When
people
don't
have
access
to
a
homophone
and
homeownership.
Q
We
know
that
is
a
problem.
We
know
that
there's
deep
problems
and
when
people
do
have
access
to
home
ownership,
we
know
that
we
can
build
a
strong
middle
class.
There's
a
lot
of
conversations
going
on
right
now
in
this
country
in
this
city,
about
the
people
who
haven't
have
not,
if
you
remember
back
to
the
presidential
campaign
of
2000
when
Al
Gore
was
one
of
the
present.
Q
If
you
remember
you
might
remember
this
one
thing,
those
you
old
enough
to
remember:
he
talked
about
the
lockbox
and
he
talked
about
the
walnut
chocolate
percent
in
the
country,
and
he
talked
about
the
red.
Ninety
nine
percent
since
2000
that
99
percent
has
gotten
poorer
since
2000
access
to
opportunity
has
gotten
less
and
it's
time
for
us
to
make
sure
we
change
that.
We
have
to
work
to
change
that
you
being
here
tonight
the
crowd.
That's
in
this
room
tonight.
Q
Doing
what
they're
supposed
to
be
doing
to
get
people
opportunities?
That's
what
we
have
to
do.
This
isn't
a
speech
I'm
giving
today
this
isn't
a
speech
yeah
around
the
mayor
of
Austin
I
get
that.
But
this
is
not
a
speech.
This
is
about
what
we
get
elected
to
do,
and
this
is
the
right
thing
to
do
as
human
beings
to
make
sure
that
we
support
people
and
support
each
other
and
lift
people
up
and
help.
Q
Make
sure
that
here
the
front
row
doesn't
have
to
come
to
a
class
and
have
an
opportunity
presented
by
a
house
that
he
will
be
able
to
buy
a
house
for
the
parents
rebel
of
our
house,
and
he
was
able
to
understand
that
that's
what
we
have
to
do
here
tonight
this
year,
we've
ramped
up
our
housing
investments
in
this
year's
budget.
Thank
you
to
the
City
Council.
We
increased
funding
by
45
percent,
including
grant
money
IDP
grant
money
me
over
a
hundred
million
dollars.
Q
We
even
are
using
buying
homes
and
to
make
them
make
the
forms
affordable,
we're
doing
what
we
have
to
do,
and
we
have
to
do
more
because
all
of
the
stuff
that's
happening
and
we're
going.
You
heard
some
state
representatives
in
the
air
from
city
councilors
we're
doing
this
without
a
federal
government
program.
We're
doing
this
without
a
housing
policy
on
the
national
level.
We're
doing
this
while
they're
coming
back
in
couple
of
counties.
Q
So
as
we're
trying
to
fund
the
public
housing,
we're
also
trying
to
create
opportunities
for
people
to
be
able
to
buy
homes,
something
that's
really
important.
We
pledge
also
for
the
first
time
to
create
a
hundred
thousand
new,
first-time
homeowners
in
Boston,
the
next
five
years.
That
number
needs
to
be
more.
Q
Simone
talked
about
why
we
hit
tonight.
Well,
why
I'm
here
tonight,
I'm
here
for
a
bunch
of
reasons
but
I'm
here
also
to
talk
about
a
three
point:
eight
million
dollar
grant
from
the
Community
Preservation
Act
that
we
voted
on
and
I
want
to
give
a
special
shout
out
the
budgets
not
done
yet
Saito's,
but
thank
the
legislators
because
they
were
able
to
raise
the
match
from
17
cents.
A
much
with
the
farmer.
C
Q
But
the
3.8
million
dollars,
something
is
fun.
The
Boston
home
Center
supports
the
new
mortgage
prep
products,
that's
a
first-time
homebuyers,
it's
called
oneplus
Boston.
It
builds
on
one
mortgage
program
developed
by
mass
housing.
Partnership.
I
want
to
thank
our
crews
here
tonight,
its
finances
in
additional
reduction
in
the
interest
rate
of
a
30th
fixed
mortgage
for
income
eligible
borrowers.
That's
what
this
is
all
about.
One
class
well
puts
up
more
homes,
first
home,
first-time
homebuyers.
Q
And
have
a
few
bucks
in
your
pocket
to
be
able
to
spend
on
your
family
and
fix
your
house
up
and
put
your
windows
and
shades
and
curtains
and
all
the
things
we
put
announcer.
That
makes
a
difference.
We've
already
have
seven
lenders
ready
to
participate.
Some
of
the
here
tonight,
I
want
to
thank
them
we're
going
to
continue
to
move
forward.
This
is
key
to
our
Housing
Strategy.
What
we're
doing
here
today,
you
heard
elected
officials,
stand
at
this
podium
and
talking
about
legislation
that
they
have
had
they're
pushing.
Q
This
is
kind
of
the
piece
of
the
puzzle.
This
is
a
puzzle
that
is
not
one
fix
to
it
all.
It's
about
making
sure
we
put
it
all
together.
I
want
to
thank
the
members
of
the
homeownership
working
group
at
Maha,
be
a
great
work.
I
want
to
thank
her,
see
this
lady
right
next
to
me
today.
He's
trying
to
get
me
away
from
this
microphone.