 Let's now take you to Quarra State, where the governor, Albert Ramon Albert Rezac, says his administration is committed to making massive investment in the education sector of the state by effectively and judiciously managing the Universal Basic Education Commission, UBEC, and Quarra State's Universal Basic Education Board, SUBEB, fund in the last few years by paying the eight-year counterpart funding within the first four-year tenure of his administration. Albert Rezac gave the revelation while addressing top government functionaries at the 2024 budget policy direction hangouts in Elanritha State Capital, a move to guide government ministries, departments, and agencies organized by the State Ministry of Planning and Economic Development. We've managed the UBEC and SUBEB funds. We've paid eight years of SUBEB funding in four years, so that's a lot of investment in that sector. We have colleges that with whom we manage our colleges of education. One college of education has more than a hundred lecturers and six hundred and nine academic staff. How do you manage those issues? So we need to change focus. We need to get better government to take over one of our institutions, one of the three colleagues of education. We need to turn one into the University of Education so that we get much more involvement in that. So our policy will go towards investments in education, which is extremely important. Rezac, who is also the chairman of the endurance governance forum, NGF, however, expressed his administration's readiness to make huge investment in the health sector to complement the existing primary, secondary, and tertiary health care in the state. In health care, we have to do much more investments, lots of investments. As you know, the bulk of primary health care is with the local government. And with local government, all the income goes to salary. So we have to step in to make sure we renovate this building and make sure we support the primary health care sector. We work with primary care under one roof. We made the challenges there. The bulk of the workers are under the local government service commission. Some states have achieved it, so we will try and achieve it to make sure and primary health care becomes seamless.