Ty Glover: So really, I mean, right there, in line with last quarter, definitely over half of our sales were off of our footprint. We also continue to see increases in our treatment. And so third quarter was no different. I think as far as volumes on the treatment side, it was a record quarter for us. And I would just mention too, that — I talked about this a little bit in the past, but most of the produced water gathering infrastructure on our land, we have the exclusive right to take water off of that system, treat it and resell it. So through good contract structure, we’re very well positioned to keep providing brackish water and/or ramp up our treatment based on each operator’s needs. And we continue to grow further and further outside of our footprint. The water team has done a really good job of contracting additional sales and expanding our footprint, so…
Operator: Next question comes from the line of Hamed Khorsand with BWS Financial.
Hamed Khorsand: Just a follow-up on this water topic. Given production having declined this past quarter and how your customers or the land leasers are operating, would that imply that water sales could actually ramp up as you see these wells come online, it was just a delay factor?
Ty Glover: So water sales is typically paralleled with completions activity. But I think, like Chris mentioned earlier, when you look at the wells that have been recently spud in this last quarter and our permit count being up so high, I think that is definitely an indicator that there will be a lot of completions activity in the coming quarters, which is really good for water sales, both on the brackish and treatment side as well as the produced water side of the business because once you get that flow back, that water has got to go somewhere. And so to answer your question, the things that we’ve talked about on the call here are good indicators for future water revenue.
Hamed Khorsand: Okay. And then what’s been the big contributor to the easement revenue line this year? And how tangible is it that it will continue to stay with the business?
Ty Glover: So probably the biggest contributors this year, especially over the last couple of quarters have been pipeline easements and material sales. So we’re seeing a lot of infrastructure build out, a lot of gas gathering lines. We’ve had a nice ramp in transmission lines as well as new gas connects and facilities, compressor stations, things like that. And I think that’s going to continue. We’re seeing operators move further away from existing infrastructure into new areas where there are requirements for new roads and gathering infrastructure and facilities. And that was one thing that we saw a little bit of a bottleneck on last quarter, was there were some areas where wells were not turned in line because of a lack of infrastructure.
And so the same operators that we talk to that gave us that feedback were the same operators that had a big ramp in easements for say, like gas takeaway. And then on the material sales side, we’ve expanded caliche sales up into New Mexico, which has been a really nice bump for us. We’ve also got 2 of the sand mines that we signed towards the end of the last year that are actually active now, and we’ve seen a nice bump in sand royalties. I think we were just under $1 million for sand royalties this last quarter. So that’s progressing well. We’ve got a couple of other sand leases that should be operational soon. And as we continue to expand our rock crushing activities and things like that, I think we’ll continue to see strong SLEM activity in the future.
Operator: Thank you. This concludes today’s teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.