Jason Smith - Bank of America Merrill Lynch
Management
So, Jim, I just had a higher-level question. I know it's a smaller part of your asset base, but just any thoughts you have on what you're hearing regarding the Colorado ballot initiatives with the signature deadline coming up in the next few weeks?
James J. Volker - Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer: Well, of course we hope that the people who proposed some of the initiatives don't get the number of ballot signatures that are necessary. The industry has done a good job, I think, of having television ads out there, especially during the dinner hour and the news hour, that explain why these would not be a very good idea for the Colorado economy or, for that matter, the environment. And so, at this point, we're cautiously optimistic that either, A, they won't make it; or B, they'll be defeated. And then we have our own initiative, I would say, industry does, out there, not just the oil and gas industry, but industry in general has its own ballot initiative out there, which basically requires that for there to be ballot initiatives, you have to get 2% of all the voters in every county in the state. So that would be a higher bar to make sure that the Colorado voters are not troubled and bothered with all these ballot initiatives, which essentially are an attempt to change the constitution of the state of Colorado for things that really ought to be handled on a regulatory basis and/or through the legislature. And so the reason that these things are coming up as ballot initiatives is that there's not the desire in the legislature for these things to be done. And so it's an end run. It's really a thwarting of the structure of both the House, the Senate, and the governor. It's a way around their wishes, really, when you think about it. So we're cautiously optimistic that really none of that's going to happen. And, in the meantime, I would say that if you look across the industry in Colorado, every company that I know of – and Whiting's at the forefront, I think – is doing their very best to be exceptionally clean operators, and that means everything from making sure that your lines, your tanks are all buttoned up, so you're not having emissions out of those, and that you're doing these new green completions, which we're doing out there at Redtail today, where we're basically – when we begin flowback after frac, you're flowing those into closed vessels. And so I really think it's a very sanitary approach to producing oil and gas in the state. I think it's something that's really good, as a matter of fact, for not only the environment but some other parts of the industry in Colorado like manufacturing, people who make tanks and other equipment, that we'll need more of as we become greener and greener. Thanks for your question.