our lives, now we are getting them in their twilight of their lives. we had a lady come in the other day crying because her husband died years ago. she's never put gas in her car. she was like, how do i put gas in my car? my dad and i and my son have offered to take any senior citizen in our area that's one of our customers to one of our competitors to fill up their tanks because we love our customers so much. >> tucker: but you're closing. three generations working there. your family has revolved around this business for 48 years and you're closing it. how do you about that? >> it's heartbreaking. but we are closing the gas portion of it, repair wise and the used car business, we will try to keep aboard as long as we can. but the bread-and-butter for us is gas. we've been in a bad contract
-- [inaudible] >> the photos themselves really did pick the deterioration. things that need to be addressed to extend the service life of the buildings. and prevent long term for, the corruption of the steel. but it did it scream out to me safety risk or collapse, or anything of that sort. so, the urgency was really there in the photos that i saw. but it is a heads up, i think, that something does need to be done repair wise. but i don't think that the collapse itself would have concluded that was something that would be a near term risk. >> given your thoughts than on the 2018 report, you had mentioned salt, sea salt spree for example. and, you specialize in this stuff. analyzing risks to buildings that are threatened by earthquakes, floods, other extreme weather. could the environment have played a role here in this collapse?