No, the Organic Farming Institute was actually started as an economic development kind of project. It was for the value, through the Keremeos-Cawston communities. They got together and said, “How do we bring economic development in?” They got some funding that way and got started. Our regional director was the board member and the chair.
There were not many courses happening. I joined, and we went through a bunch of different board members. We have the manager of a bank on the board. We are on there. There's George Hanson, a winery, and there's the regional district director. There's Rochelle Eisen, who used to be the organic extension agent for B.C.