News of Concern to Racine County residents

Transcript

News of Concern to Racine County residents

The Don Rosen Show · Wed Jan 28, 2026

We're seeing county I is joining me right now. And the biggest story facing America and we're

seeing right now is that fire of pizza hut. You know, my husband would say, yes, pizza

is important. Well, it's not bad. I don't understand something with this. Now I know

you just came back from Florida, right? Like, like, by the way, she came into the building

like she was just getting off the beach at a cabana because I did. That cabana look

about it once you came in. We had they had a fire while you were gone. It peaches happen

the other day. You tell me the news, Dodd. They had a fire at pizza hut. I'm watching

that avenue, the one right over here at I Ohio and Washington, right? The, and I could

show you a picture of the fire engines there. They had the hook and ladders. They had firemen

on the roof and everything. And what I heard was the fire came through the roof. Yet I

just said you a photograph yesterday, somebody took, I must have been with a drone. And

there's no damn does look like any damage to the roof. Not like fire. They said there

was like 50,000, 100,000 miles worth of damage. There's a lot of damage. Now, obviously

it could is on the inside. So I just want to know what's the truth? What are they hiding

from us? What is it they don't want to say? Now I have a drive pass there just a bag

couple of hours before the fire broke out. Doesn't make me a suspect. But I have a friend

who works for Domino's and he's been working there for years at Domino's decades. And

I said, you know, they did find an old Domino's jacket at the scene. So if I were you, I'd

lawyer up right away. No, they didn't find. Anyway, so I just, I was curious about that because

I just saw the picture this morning. And I said, wow. And that's a very good question of

which I do not know the answer to. We're going to get the routine counting. I am this

one. We can definitely ask some questions. So if my staff is listening, this is your

job this morning. What happened? It's like literally. Yeah. So I went to Florida, mom,

Pa, Lockwood, they celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary.

Model 12. Okay. I know. So that was fun. Yeah. Well, my parents celebrated. They

lived in Florida 60 years. I know they celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary. We had all

these people brought in. And we, what I did was for their 60th anniversary, I found

they had two pictures of their honeymoon. And it was in Quebec, Canada. That's what

they had their honeymoon. And it was at this resort. I forget the name of the resort.

But I called up the resort. I, they're still there. Yeah. And unfortunately, they only

spoke French and I didn't speak French. So I called up the better business bureau. I

said, could you put us on a three way conversation? Because I want to talk to these people.

They said, yes. And they did that. They translated everything. And I said, can you send me

a picture of the front of your building? Because I want to compare it to my parents now.

They did. It's exactly the same. Here we are 60 years later. And nothing's changed

in the picture. So I, they sent me two color postcards. And I put them, I had them framed

here on Main Street. There was a, a good frame shop there. And they took the two pictures

of my parents standing in front of it from their honeymoon with skis, no less. My parents

don't ski. I think that was, I think they got this bar of the skis from somebody to take

a picture. And there they are. And there it is today. It nothing's changed. Yeah.

You know, and it's really interesting because like, so we're sitting at the family dinner,

you know, we're went out to dinner. This big fancy dinner. Dad had a lot of bourbon. It

was probably because of this three children are probably present that poor guy and three

three girls. We have their three, there's three lockwood girls. And anyway, so like one

of the best things that I love about my parents stories they met on a blind date. And it

was a double date with his cousin. They both ended up marrying those, those women. And

my dad, we had just come off the ship from the Navy. My dad too, just got out of the

Navy. Yeah. And so like, he is all dapper and, you know, doing his Navy thing. And he

were, he ended up working for the telephone company with, for a bell telephone. And

so like, he was the line man climbing up at the top of the telephone poles. And he

would call my mom from the top of the telephone poles. And not pay for the call. And not

pay for the call. That is so locked. Back then, you had to pay for this. I know. I know.

I know. So yeah. So you would call my mom and just be coming a telephone operator too.

Oh, look at that. I know. Stealing free calls from both of us. They're working both

ends of the deal from the Paul and from the office. So my mother told me when she went

on her honeymoon, my mother never left the Bronx in her entire life. Just since she stayed

there, she was born in the Bronx. She lived her life and went to school in the Bronx,

never left the Bronx. So she marries my father. He just got out of the Navy World War

2. Just got out. And first date he took her on was to a Broadway music. Holy went to

Carousel on Broadway. And he left during the first few minutes of the show and sat in

the lobby. He can't sit in the brought. He just can't sit in the theater. He gets

very antsy. And I want to say he dropped me during Carousel. But he was sitting in the

lobby. He didn't leave it. So they get married. And my mother again, never left the Bronx.

Here she is going to a different country. Don't speak English up there. And she said to

herself, I'm here with them. I don't know this man. And I just left the country with

him. I don't know this guy. How long do I know? I married him. But I don't know him that

well. And here I am in a foreign country with this guy. I don't know. How long were

they married? 67 years. Wow. And on her deathbed, she said, I never really knew this guy.

No, no, no, they were married 67 years. Yeah. And but she was terrified the whole honeymoon.

Yeah, I know. I just left the country with this guy. It's known for a short time.

There's also like one of the things that I also, I'm going to talk about this for just

about a minute. And then we'll switch to the news because I know that's not what we're

here for. But we're here for anything I say. One of the one of the most, my most favorite

mom, Palaquid stories is like, these are people who grew up in Cleveland, Ohio. And they decided

they were going to be foreign people. And like the juxtaposition of that is all that your

mind lets it be. It was literally like green acres without the green acres. No humor

on Lockwood land. It was just like a lot of raw trying to figure it all out. But you know,

what's interesting is is that like they, when we were cleaning out their stuff when they

moved about a year and a half ago, they found the book. It was five acres and independence

is the name of the book. And it was all about being independent and and raising your own food and

and like just not depending on people. But that interdependence was was also very dominant,

you know, growing up Lockwood. And so I, I've always thought about that through my whole life.

And that's been something that I've been kind of reminiscing and ruminating. So I had to get

that out. So all I do is picture your father with the pitch for it. And that's why I'm saying

like that. The American Gothic. Remember that picture? Yes. Yes. The guy with the pitch for it

with a farm wife next. That's what I picture. I never met your parents. But that's the image.

Okay. So we're going to talk about the news and just a second. It's been happening since Denise

has been good. All right. So hold on. Quick break here. Then we're going to talk more about the

news. Okay. Pizza Hut. We're going to investigate that story. Get back to that. That's under

deep investigation. That's coming up. Denise Lockwood is here. I don't know what movie left

about that. That big ball at Fox God. The image. Yeah. Remember when you used to go to the

Delts. When you're here. You're here. Went up at the static lecture. At Tommy Bartlett at the

Delts. They used to have the, you know, science exhibit. He used to put your hand there when your

hair stood up on it. That ball looks like it. Fox God. All right. So President Trump was here.

Governor was our governor at that time. Walker Walker Scott Walker was there. And they declared

here it is the eighth wonder of the world. Yes. And nothing appeared. Absolutely nothing except that

big static ball. That's all it's there. So there were three phases that were supposed to be

built out. The first phase Fox kind of did build out. But it was very small part of a very large

campus. And we already know a lot, a lot of what's been happening with Microsoft. But over the last

week, they, they kind of tripled down to kind of perspective. So what they did was Mount Pleasant

approved site plans for Microsoft's next expansion footprint. And this, I want to be very clear. This

is not building permits. That's not where we're at yet. And the big stakes are multi-year construction

plus major and electricity demand. Okay. So there, these are 15 additional data centers. And

data centers are notorious for using quite a bit of water, quite a bit of electricity,

but I want to also put this in perspective because when this initial site came through

for Foxconn to build out and have all of their suppliers, their footprint. And I've got a little

cheat sheet here bear with me. So originally Foxconn had a land footprint of 3,000 acres.

Microsoft's is 13, actually about roughly about 1300 acres. This is part of what's called a

TID District, a tax incremental district. Number five, they're building footprint that Foxconn

had promoted was 20 million square feet. Microsoft's is 8.7 million. The headline investment

for Foxconn was 10 billion. Microsoft has publicly described there's a 7 billion.

The jobs claim for Foxconn was 13,000. And that's where I want to talk about.

Yeah. Because that's what people remember. How many jobs they promised and how many did

they deliver it on? So you left the 13,000. That's what that was 13,000. I'm going to be real

honest. I'm just coming off of vacation brain. I know that my tie still in your head.

It certainly wasn't the footprint that they had promised. I want to say maybe a few thousand.

Yeah, wasn't even close. If that. But what happened was is I'm one of those weirdos in the room

that actually reads the developers agreements and the agreements that they have for these tax

incremental finance districts, primarily because that's where things get gummed up.

And you want a really strong accountability journalism when it comes to this. So there were two

triggers that were supposed to happen in order for Foxconn to get the tax credits that the state

and state had promised. Those two things didn't pan out. So they were supposed to improve the land

by the amount they said. And they were also supposed to get the jobs numbers that they had

promised. Neither of those true two triggers were met. They ended up becoming taxpayers. That's

the net of what happened. Okay. They in the bank building, Bimo Harris at a main street,

right? State name. That's a whole separate project. But they brought the building. Foxconn

and they probably were going to put a welcome center here. People will come. They can get employed

here. The room is right there on the main level. Still empty with dust. Nothing ever happened.

And that's where really strong accountability journalism comes in. And I want to kind of

underscore that. And so when we look at these documents as journalists, we are going to be

very much monitoring a lot of the progress. And we're, you know, what is happening underneath

a lot of this. And so you've got to got to look at it through a couple of different lenses. So

that's what we as a news website are committed to doing. So I want to just kind of frame that out.

Now given what's going on with the data centers, these are 15 data centers. They are not

employee heavy facilities. You might have a few hundred people at each. However, the construction

impact on this is a 10 year several thousand. I want to say, yeah, it's a lot. It's basically

the first phase has the potential. Oh, then I lost my place. Oh, 2300 union construction jobs.

So I want to make sure that I'm filling this, this picture out for people as to what is happening,

what are the promises. But I also want to make sure that we're clear. This is not at the, this is

at what we would call the conceptual phase of the project. So building permits for these new data

centers, the 15 haven't been, have not been, uh, at that juncture yet. What happened with Foxconn?

The, the, the, the road is excited. It was like, Oh, look what's coming. We're going to be reborn

in our scene. We've got sturdom and we've got Mount Pleasant. We've got Foxconn coming in jobs

for everybody. What happened because it was a bust. So, um, there's a couple of different things

that happened at the same time. You had, um, Scott Walker lost the election. Uh, you also had

Governor Evers come in wanting to renegotiate the contract. Uh, you also had at the same time, though,

they were signaling the Foxconn is a company that is foreign owned. And most of what they do is

electronics, big contract manufacturing. Okay. So what they, what's happening is they were,

they had a lot of contracts with Apple and a lot of different, uh, other electronics companies.

The market in China tanked like hard. And so that had a ripple effect on the contracts

that they were able to get to justify the build. And so they had to, um, really pivot hard

with regards to what they were making. And so they were working on quite a few. They ended up

COVID hit as well. And so COVID, 2020 hit. And it was their market disruptions, supply chain

issues. It was a very bumpy, bumpy ride. Tell me, Betty Davis from all about you,

buckle up. It's gonna be a bumpy night. And that's, but that's what happened. You know,

and they ended up making face masks and all sorts. Yeah, great. They get nobody got employed

with that. Okay. So now we've got Microsoft coming in. We'll talk after the break about this.

They're also making. Oh, look at the promises they're making. Look what they're gonna be.

I don't know. In Microsoft is an American company. So they don't, they're not a foreign owned

company. We'll see what happens with them. But you got a story with them, Microsoft. I do.

Greg brought some canolies in. And I lost plus 31 pounds. And I called him in a naveler.

Hey, Greg, Greg, what happened to those canolies? I want to know. Now I did check yesterday

more to the canolies were gone. They're in the fridge. Oh, they're in the fridge. So they're

still around. Yeah, they're still in the fridge. And they're from Tannudas. They're handmade.

They're delicious. How do you go wrong with Tannudas? Strawberry and chocolate. You know what,

though, if I have one, I'm going to want to. Okay, Donald, I'll make you a deal. You and I

can split one. No, I can't. Not even half. No, I don't. It just, okay, and then I respect your

journey on what you're trying to do. And I will ask you and tell you and demand you no more. They'll

just go to waste and get thrown away. No, it's on you. Oh, thanks. Now I got a guilt trip on top of

this old leg. You know, my, we had my wife bought for me for my birthday last year. She bought

like 12 boxes of my favorite girl scout cookies. And she didn't bring them. She left them at work.

And once a month, she'd bring one in. So she brought two in because she left the job she was at.

They were two left. Haven't touched them. They're in there. I say them in the freezer,

but I don't want to. 31 pounds. I'm not going to go back to that. Then I, then I respect that.

You just, I'm just, now I'm just having fun at this point. I'm not, I'm not expecting you to eat

and you don't have to. If you don't want, if you'd like to take one home to your wife, you can.

She's in the same boat. She left. Then let's forget this ever even happened.

She says, been me. Just to be my friend. As, of course, I'll be, and I'm proud of you too. So I was,

I was changing something on the emails here because it was under my name or something. So I put

it under a generic thing and only you and I have our emails on there now. All the rest of the

people have to start all over too bad. It was under my account. Everyone is opening emails under my

account. How can they do that? They'd be opening your, you know, it was, it was under my chrome

profile. Oh, and I don't want that. You're going to submit this to WBA for some information.

The can only chamber. Well, thank you, Greg. Thank to the thought was there. Yes, of course.

I'm always thinking of you. I know you are. Okay. Okay. The can only capers over. You're going

to cover that story. Yes. Did he lock with Racine County eyes with me here? We left off.

We were talking about Microsoft is now taking over the, the land that was Foxconn.

Right. Right. Foxconn can have anything there under their name. That big steel ball. Is

that still going to be there? Yes. Yes. So they're still going to have a presence there.

Yes. Do they really need a presence here? Okay. So here's one of the issues I think that we

struggle with with with Foxconn because it is a contract manufacturer. A lot of the things they

do, they don't, they contractually cannot talk about. And so we really struggle with, I think,

what is Foxconn? What do they do? Because they're not advertising a lot about the things they make.

And so I think that's one of the pieces to the puzzle that is a dynamic that we need to like,

yes, Foxconn didn't happen. Yep. Microsoft is happening. Yes. To what's Microsoft is

promising how many jobs, you know, so and it's a couple of hundred per data center is what

it is what it was a data center. So a data center is like servers, right? So you've got a room full

of like the, it's, it's the infrastructure, the hard infrastructure that computers run on my,

my sister is going to yell at me because I'm not explaining this correctly because I'm not an

IT guru, but it's the physical hardware that actually the electricity, the storage, the,

the data flows through. I'm hoping I'm giving that credit. Do not call it.

No, we're wrong because I probably am. But that's, that's, it's the physical hardware that,

that these, the electricity flows through so that when we push the chat GPTs and all of the

things that we use for the internet, it has to flow somewhere, right? So that's where it goes.

I have no idea what you're talking about. And you know what? We, before we got on the air,

we talked about something that I'm not going to do either because it's like out of my realm. It's

very simple, but you know what I'm talking about. Well, we talked about with my, the thing I

wanted to do with my bank account and so, yeah, so I'm not going to deal with this. You know,

all I need to know is when I turn on my phone, turn on computer, it works. That's all I want to know.

Yep. And that's what Microsoft is going to make sure it happens. It's going to work. And it's

going to get better at what it does. I can use for you. When I go into Google now and I ask a

question, I get the AI thing. Right. I find it amazing how they can look up this information so

fast. That's why because they have more data centers. But you know, it used to be, when you piped

it, typed in a topic into Google, you got all these things. You had to click on this to

no more AI gives you the answer right there. I find it amazing. But where does that answer come

from? It comes from now pleasant. Okay. So, well, and so like this is going to change our economy

quite a bit. Okay. This is a highly disruptive economic driver for this region. So I want to

kind of frame this out because I think it's really important is that you also have the AI

economy as well that is really taking root in southeastern Wisconsin and or actually Wisconsin

in general. So you've got the K the the K the Kenosha Innovation Technology Center.

That is a big driver of innovation around AI applications. You also have UW gateway is also

working on how do we understand and manage these processes around IT. And then you've got UW

Milwaukee and you've got Title Town Tech, which these are think of it like electricity when electricity

was born. We needed all of the infrastructure, right? You needed telephone poles and people like

my dad to climb up the ladder of the telephone pole and hang the wire. I make free phone calls,

yeah. Yeah. Yep. That's my mom of which I'm really grateful that happened. But you needed that

infrastructure to happen first. That's what's happening with AI with data centers. So it's not a

nebulous thing that's occurring here. This is also generating a lot of influence around manufacturing

and around things like marketing and customer service and how we do business. So we need to

zoom out I think a little bit just with understanding actually what's happening

in the region. So and people like me when I go to Google and the AI thing comes up and explains

every detail of the answer of my question. It's because of these data centers. And journalism.

Let's put that right there. And because I and this is having a very very big impact specifically

on like more national journalism because when you go to AI, you don't go to a news website to produce

that content. And also you don't it kind of divorces that that authorship and that authority

from that product. Well, I'm talking about a question like when I asked Barbara Rueck,

I interviewed the lead singer from Toto and his mother is Barbara Rueck and I said,

what musicals has she been in? AI popped up and said, here's a list of Barbara Rueck's musicals.

Right. But there's probably a website. Well, there was a website they got it from. Yeah,

they had to get it from a website obviously because it's comes the internet. It does it faster than I

can do it. But if I want to know what's going on, I don't say what's going on. I go to your website

for some kind of eye and I look at what the news stories are. So a lot of a lot of data is being pulled

threaded through AI and yeah, they search the internet. Correct. But that's so fast. It is

shocking. Denise Lockwood, we're seeing county I as my guest this morning, 287G. What does that

even mean? Sounds like a secret formula. So it's it has to do with a program through the department

of health services and it's focused is where local law enforcement agencies can sign a formal

agreement with ICE and designate personnel who after training and authorization can perform

specific immigration enforcement functions in a correctional setting under ICE oversight.

And one of the things that happened in January, a few weeks ago, Kenosha County,

you well, they used to house iced detainees years ago and they ended up not

canceling that contract for a little while. What that means is is that they under the current

administration have the capability to act as ICE agents or not ICE agents, but they

they can perform some of the tasks that that that ICE does. So basically what Kenosha County did

and this is why this is important, Racine County does not subscribe to the 287G program at this time.

Cherish mailing did not sign on to that. He is not going for re-election. There are two candidates

to my knowledge that Henry Perez is one of them. Henry Perez and then Kerry Magical.

If my understanding is correctly, I think they both mentioned that they would sign on to 287G.

And so those are some of the things that we're going to be following quite a bit during the

elections. So those those that election doesn't happen until the fall, but I want to just kind of

bring that up a little bit. And here's one of the things that's happening is that

the question is is around how we enforce things and one of the things that is currently happening

at the national level is that Trump is really taking a lot of issue with sanctuary cities.

Kenosha Racine are not sanctuary cities. Milwaukee is, I believe, and so is Madison. And so

one of the things that's happening is he's talking a lot about withholding funds,

state, and some funding. There's a lot that we still need to unpack on this. This is definitely

a storyline that we're paying attention to. So those are some of the things that I wanted to kind

of bring up because I think people are very interested in making sure really understanding

what's happening in. So 287G. Yeah. Local municipalities do their own

is basically what it comes down to. But that doesn't keep the federal license. So basically what

it is is this is a program that operates day to day and what the functions. So it allows the

the local staff to carry out how detainees will be identified inside the jail and how the county

will handle the release decisions. So if courts restrict detainer-based holds. Okay. And so you have

to understand legally what a detainer is. So if you come over to the United States undocumented

and don't, there's a big process that has to be gone through to register in the United States and

go through a what's called an administrative law process to start the process of becoming a citizen

or as somebody who's who's refugee status. There's a lot of moving parts. I'm still quite frankly

trying to understand it myself. I don't understand. And you know, I only know what I see and I don't

know the whole issue. But I see some of the ICE agents and then who's pulling American citizens

dragging them out of their cars and they're American citizens. They're born here.

And they're still and that's that shouldn't be the function of ICE to drag American citizens

out of their cars, shouldn't it? Well, and I think there's a lot of big questions that we need

to kind of settle in on. So one of the things that I was I was kind of paying attention to even though

I was in Florida, I was paying attention to the whole world vanishes when you're singing on the beach

with a my die. No, Mr. No, no, no, Lair would not say that. And so so basically one of the things that

you have to understand is is that when people are here illegally, there's are there's that is

considered an administrative violation. And that is akin to a municipal type of citation. It is not

even that process is not handled in criminal court. Okay. So a judge has to sign a warrant to

enter your home and things along that line and have probable cause. All of what we're seeing

in Minneapolis, even in North Carolina and a lot of the other LA raises a lot of big red flags

from a constitutional standpoint of probable cause, lawful detentions. There's just a lot to

you know, and I'm a little older than you. I remember the Vietnam protest wars of the 1960s,

where people just protest. They were beaten and they were clubbed because they were protesting.

And I was a teenager. So I didn't quite understand the ramifications like we would do today.

But they weren't doing anything other than protesting. And they were beaten. This is when Richard

Nixon brought his military in to get them off the streets. He didn't want them to stay. And

things on my hand. I went to Kent state for a little bit, but that was not. But one of the people

don't know if they shot students at Kent state who were protesting shot and killed the National Guard did.

Well, and you the training that that municipal county law enforcement have is de-escalate, right?

And so one of the things as a journalist who's covered crime for gosh 27 years is I know

what that training looks like. I've actually been through it and done stories about it over my

career. We are not in Kansas anymore on this whole process of what's happening with ICE.

And it is I think very disturbing to watch. It is, you know, whenever

we see a lot of those videos, there's a beginning and a middle and an end. And so we also need

to be mindful of that piece of it too, not to say or take away from what happened. But

when we see those videos, we need to shift into question and question and question and get

that highest and best information. And so those are some of the things that as a journalist makes

me kind of like, okay, we're going to start working on helping understand these pieces because

you've got to pull it apart and make sense of it. When I hear my Vietnam protest. Absolutely. When I was in

college, that was in college 1972. And this was the height of the Vietnam War. They, you know,

people were protesting all over. And the college campus said we're doing a big protest.

The Pepsi call that we need protesters. And they say, well, I'm kind of busy. We'll give you free

lunch. Okay. So that's how they snagged you. That's how they got me a free lunch. So I think

got me a lunch. And they said, you'd be here at, you know, four o'clock, we're going over Pepsi.

I had no idea why we were protesting Pepsi Cola. They said, well, they're supporting the war

effort. I said, I didn't, I didn't care. I was 18 years old. I got a free lunch. And we went

over there. And the show had the protest work. We were a picketing. And the police showed up with

one of those little scooter wagons they have. And they said, they're doing a shift change at five.

Come on. You guys promised five o'clock. You'd be done. Put your signs in the wagon. I'll

bring it back to the campus for you. Don't leave them here. And that was it. We all went home.

But I had no idea why I was protesting. And I don't know if a lot of people know why they're

protesting. I don't know. Let's talk about this before we run out of time here. School college

readiness. Yes. So we're speaking about my college. Yes. Yes. Yes. So we're seeing unified

issue in a report around how they're doing with people of color and getting them ready for college.

And the report basically said, we're not doing so great. In fact, we're not doing a good job at all.

And I think one of the things that this opens the door to is also the conversation of

college readiness is kind of the middle of the problem. Okay. But we also have a

how we are need to adjust how we're treating people and being fair. And so you've had

this big disruption with funding around diversity, equity and inclusion.

That is a very distinct problem. And especially in recene, we are we were named the second

worst place in the country for black people to live. And that takes into consideration from infant

black infant mortality to high school graduation rates to test scores. So we these are really big

conversations that need to be threaded through some very a myriad of different elements because

at the end of the day, these are not easy conversations to have. Okay. And so when we are looking at

these reports, it is it is an interesting process from a journalistic standpoint because

we don't have a some for some folks, they don't have a lot of appetite to walk through the hard

stuff of diversity, equity and inclusion. And that's an interesting choice to me because the data

is so profound when you look at the how are we doing as a community and the failings of

workforce and healthcare access and things like childhood led poisoning. The data is so

we can't ignore this. We just can't afford it. It's depressing job you love.

Some days, some days it is. It's a lot. But also I take a step back and I think about the value

of the work that we're doing, you know, not everybody's going to agree with things, but it's not my

job to make people agree. It's my job to make sure, keep showing up and doing the next right story

that is solutions based that helps the conversations become the dinner table that we come together

around. We've been a local radio station for 99 years. They're coming up to 100 years this year.

Yeah. And December 100 years. Yeah. We are so lucky to have Racine County as a news partner.

I don't think we've ever had a news partner before. Really? Well, I've been here 27 years. I don't

remember any. Well, I'm so blessed. Yeah. We're the blessed ones. I'm so grateful. But you know,

as Stuart says, take a deep dive by going into Racine County. I love that. Give the website.

Racine County I dot com. That's EY E. Correct. Racine. You got to spell out the word county.

Right? Correct. Racine County. I EY E dot com. All the news is there. I go to it all the time.

Thank you. Did he slot with older Racine County? I Racine County. I dot com. I don't always

a pleasure having you know, I always have a good time. That's about to be a half hour. Now,

it just flew by. I know. I know. All right. You didn't bring back any of your warm weather from Florida.

I didn't.

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