 St. Jude Hospital operations have been housed in the George Audlum Stadium for more than 13 years. The St. Jude Hospital Board of Directors, led by Chairperson Lucius Elevic, is confronted with a myriad of challenges. Hospital employees continue to endure substandard occupational conditions, and the structural integrity of the stadium itself continues to deteriorate. Committed to alleviating the issues affecting the St. Jude Hospital, Prime Minister Hon. Philip J. Peer allocated more than $1.5 million in his maiden budget for remedial works on the George Audlum Stadium. That money has addressed some of the more urgent concerns at the hospital. We were indeed thankful in terms of the $1.5 million that was allocated to St. Jude to kind of address and to some extent remedy some of the infrastructural difficulties we were encountering at this location. So we think that went a long way in helping us, even in still confidence, in the persons coming here in terms of the debris that are likely to be flown off the roof. And then there's a psychological effect of coming to a hospital, and you see some rusted, galvanized, Uzama-alad, Mokawe-anchosh, galvanized, Ka-pes-ke-raish, sort of, yes. It has that kind of psychological impact. And we think that even the personnel, the doctors and the nurses, also had some complaints, meaningful issues in terms of their accommodation. And we were able to do some work in the lunch rooms, we were able to do some work in the sleeping quarters. So we think all put together it would actually impact the quality of care that our service personnel would render to our patients when they visit here. Honourable pair, on October 18th, held an audience with members of the Board of Directors for the St. Jude Hospital. Board members and the Prime Minister engaged in fruitful dialogue and exchanged views on St. Jude Hospital operations. Honourable pair, who was also joined by the Minister for Health, apprised Board members of his administration's plans to transfer St. Jude Hospital operations out of the George-Odelham Stadium to more suitable facilities. In September, Honourable pair announced external work on the original construction site, which was abandoned in 2016, will resume in November. The Prime Minister's announcement was welcomed by St. Jude Hospital Board members. We are presently on borrowed time. We are living here by the graces of God, and I think God gave us a brain and we probably should use it actively. I say that to mean that, yes, we need to expedite the activities, the processes that would enable us to leave St. Jude and go over to OJ at our, let's go, our Premier site. We are very heartened to hear that work on the new facility, not the new facility, but let's call it our Premier site would commence in November. There's that kind of expectation. What I'm happy to know is that that project moved into what we call a project mode with some kind of a long time frame, with a start date and an end date. And I think that would inspire confidence in a number of people in the south. An independent technical committee appointed last August was tasked with assessing both phases of the St. Jude Hospital construction project. The committee's report concluded construction on phase one or the original construction site could have been completed as early as 2017. Guided by the recommendations from multiple technical audits on the St. Jude Hospital construction project, Prime Minister Pierre has honored his commitment to St. Lucia and has actioned the most prudent, safest and immediate option to deliver the St. Jude Hospital to the people of St. Lucia from the office of the Prime Minister, Rihanny Isidou.