Thank you, Mr. Chairman. On the long-term care, we aren’t planning on discounting the work that Avens had done. Avens had presented the work to us. We’ve looked at it. I think we’re going to do some more studying on the information and do some of our own grafting on aging population. Like I indicated in my response to a previous Member, the numbers that we’re getting… The number at a national level and the numbers provided by Avens are fairly consistent. It’s just a matter of us checking the numbers to make sure we file our own information on that. I would say that wouldn’t be a huge job, aside from the volume of work at Health and Social Services. I would say that within a couple of months we should be able to have that information. I should be more specific; within two months we should have that information.
As far Stanton goes, we’re moving through the process. The plan is to renew Stanton. The schedule is we will improve and renew Stanton and as we move through the process and at the end of the day, we’re building, we are renewing or renovating and the hospital can take us 20 or 30 years. So the hospital can address our needs 30 years into the future. Stanton needs a lot of work and it’s very technical work. We’re going to keep the hospital open, obviously, during the time we are going to be working on Stanton, so it’s not like new construction. We can’t be constructing in certain areas, so we have to do it in phases and move people around. This all takes time. Once the renewal has started, once construction has started we’re expecting that the construction phase is going to be five or six years.