 Mr. Speaker, I rise to provide brief support on this motion to borrow the sum of funds for a water project and Mr. Speaker, I just want to draw to the attention of members that indeed a water project like this is critical. I do not think that we have attained 100% coverage in terms of water access to the entire population in spite of all what has happened in terms of development and for a government at this time to continue to invest in the water sector is critical. Also, I need to draw to the attention of members that the Paseus Water Project that was implemented under the last administration are pipeline projects since 2016 at the Senbusha Social Development Fund. In fact, those projects are pulled out and they are implemented. But we have a pipeline of water projects because under the basic need trust fund, under the BNTA program, the water sector is a critical sector. In fact, the Caribbean Development Bank has agreed to remove other sectors under the BNTA program. So they no longer implement health projects. They move away from markets and they have retained water and sanitation. Access and drainage projects, education is three main sectors and now they start looking at the issue of livelihoods. So over the years, recognizing that the grant agreement with the basic need trust fund from one cycle to the next is limited. You get about 10 million. But we always have a pipeline of water projects and this project was pulled out, was implemented within the last administration. But these projects are there and there are many more projects like this. I also want to inform members, Mr. Speaker, that our government, the government of the Senbusha Liberal Party, we have not just sat by and implement water projects. There has been an important initiative targeting on niances to our population and that is why we have looked at, we have had, the Prime Minister allowed me to have a conversation with Wasco on the very thing that the member for Strosell spoke about and I'm happy to just mention, it will be formalized, that Wasco has agreed to look at the ease of allowing persons to have access to water, especially persons who are living on family estate and cannot come up with the landpapers. These persons in the past, it has been a difficult thing for them to get water connection. But Wasco has agreed that with a simple affidavit, persons on family estate will get water connection with a simple disclaimer. That being said, Wasco has agreed to also provide 24 free connections for poor persons every year and they will meet part of the tariff. This was negotiated. So the issue of the water sector and responding to vulnerable population, we're not just establishing the network and I can tell you the Senrusha Social Development Fund has invested millions of dollars in the water sector, millions of dollars. In fact, I can tell you that water from Belvedere all the way to Bhutan, it was the Senrusha Social Development Fund that established that water project and to establish a water system at the Bhutan Gap to serve Bhutan and now we will bring water into Colombia. These projects were implemented. So our investment in the water sector, and I can tell you, when there was a change of administrative, I was personally responsible for taking, working with the then parliamentary representative to take water from Hill 20 to bring all the way down into the Dofee area because persons there were using water from tanks. So the participation of this government in establishing the Senrusha Social Development Fund as a vehicle towards a development for vulnerable people has demonstrated that in so many ways that sometimes we forget to celebrate the policies of the Labour Party. The establishment of the James Belgrade Fund, the Senrusha Social Development Fund, the National Conservation Authority and so many pro-poor entities is so powerful and it does well for poor people. And finally, Mr Speaker, I just want to make this point that water is so critical and we're going to continue and I know that the AG office through the Prime Minister is going to continue the conversation with Wasco and like you rightly said, there are persons who are unable sometimes to pay the water bill and it is difficult. But I've said to Wasco that it is so important that when there's a newborn in a home, a newborn baby and I can tell you what it is to have a newborn baby in the home, I'm a grandpa. You understand? When you have a newborn baby in a home, hygiene is so critical. You understand? Yes. Yes. You understand? Hygiene is so important and when a young mother is unable to pay the bill, you need to ask yourself what heart do you have to stay, to disconnect a home when there's a newborn baby. When there's a senior person, you understand, unable to pay the bill but you see the demands, the need, you know, it is hard-wrenching and of course it is something that occurs in government that we are looking at and that is why funds are made available to the 100,000 dollars per quarter can go a long way in ensuring 100,000, 400 for the year from our prime minister can ensure that a number of persons in Schrozer, you can avoid them being disconnected or you can assist them in having water connection, you know? That can be done because the prime minister I'm sure would have said in this letter that you can use part of it to do some soft things, some social interventions and I know that you are socially minded. So the people of Schrozer certainly on the advice of this parliament can go to the constituency office in Schrozer and ensure that they do not get disconnected. Yes? So, Mrs. B, so Mrs. B, so Mrs. B, so Mrs. B, we really want to applaud the government for investing in the water sector. This is not the end of it. We'll continue to ensure this government that every solution access to pipeline water because it's a right, it's a basic need and this is not a luxurious good. It's a basic need and it needs it. Thank you very much.