 Every bird has a nest, every crab has a hole, every human being must have a house. As the economy started to grow, we started having the internal migration. As in every country, the city is the glitter, the city is the magnet. People coming down to look for work, have a new middle class. At that time, let's look at what the Senutia society was at the time. A girl would stay at home, at her parents' home, until some gentleman, and I say gentleman, would take her away. You know? Now, the economy is getting modern. The girls who were working aside, they're not waiting for any gentleman. They want their own homes. So, must provide for them. What did we have? We're on castries. Look at castries. You had castries, the area where they used to call the Hollywood. It's not there anymore. There was Brooklyn and Hollywood, some little mother cottages there. That side, you go up to the show say, and you go down to Castries River, and then you meet the sea. That's the totality of castries. Then you have the slums of the Conway, and the slums of Marsha, and the slums of Warsaw. That's the totality of castries. So, you had to get land. And in getting land now, you again closed in by history. You know, history now box you in. You still have, you still find the land even in all the land in the vicinity of Castries, owned by the old families. San Soci was owned by the Barnard family. His clavier owned Antropole, and that area. So, they had the moan owned by the War Department in England, or the moan area, moan and kubari owned by the War Department. So, what do you do? So, we decided, look, we have to acquire. We are going to buy the lands once it becomes, once it comes on the urban pressure we have to acquire. So, we negotiated with the Barnard family, and we bought the Conway and San Soci. We negotiated with the clavier family, and bought Antropole. We negotiated with the British War Department, and bought the lands, bought the moan. We created organizations. We created the Urban Development Corporation, the UDC. And the UDC first, it was first the moan development. Then it was the moan and San Soci development, and as we expanded became the Urban Development Corporation. The first chairman of the moan development was Alan Busque. But when Alan became a minister, I then expanded it, and I brought in Reginald Mitchell to handle the UDC. And we had persons like Leonard Orger, engineer. He was both engineer. He was architect. Metatoud Fair. And we then, first development was at the San Soci. We sold those houses, and a lot for $17,000 complete. I hear the noise in the market steps now. Don't buy. The place is swamp. It's going to sink, etc. etc. But people who bought at the time now had a sweepstake. Then we went to the moan, the moan development. Because of the access road to the moan, it was difficult. People didn't have cars. They had to get home. So the moan went very slowly, until we started improving the road to the moan, and then more and more people started living there. So we had the Urban Development Corporation. When we were doing the redway, we would speak about the redway. Otherwise, also we used the Urban Development Corporation to buy land at Redway. Redway Orchard, Redway Park, UDC. The people in the eastern area, they wanted lands. What was up at Antropo? A cocoa estate. So we acquired and built, put the Antropo Development and more and more people going. So you had to create the blocks, the building blocks, the organizations. So in agriculture, we had the bank. It's not only agriculture. Agriculture expanded into fishing, to small businesses, etc. Until, of course, it's dismantled now. But these things were what they called a piece of social engineering to change, use your organization to change society. So we gave now the middle class, the teachers, the nurses, the civil servants, the persons in the banks, give them an opportunity for the first time to own a piece of solution through the Urban Development Corporation. We also now created the San Lucia Mortgage Finance Company so they can go and borrow money from there. We strengthened the cooperative bank, you know, in order to, because hopefully the bank was, at one time, was the only bank that would lend, do long-term lending.