Yes, we do, and we do it through a large Canadian network of provincial co-op associations. We have about 19 partners that talk to producers, such as the Ontario Co-operative Association. They're on the ground, right at the community level. We provide those advisory services through the current program known as the cooperative development initiative and the Ag-CDI, the agricultural co-op development initiative.
The challenge is that the ability to provide those services is very limited. Because it's only $1 million a year for co-op advisory services to 19 organizations across the country, you have a situation now that a province the size of Alberta gets $60,000 a year to help all cooperatives get formed on the ground. That's why we really are reinforcing the need for an expanded and renewed co-op development initiative, so that people on the ground can get access to those services.