SDTC is what is technically called a “shared-governance” corporation. There is a board, the majority of which is not appointed by the Governor in Council, but there is a minority—7 of the 15 members—appointed by the Governor in Council.
ISED has a role in helping to identify, as an example, prospective members of the board who would be appointed by the GIC. That's one area where the department intersects directly with SDTC. The other is obviously that the government has a contribution agreement with SDTC to deliver the programming that the government has asked that organization to deliver. We are the custodian of that agreement. It's like a contract, and we manage this agreement with SDTC.
We have an interest in ensuring that they're staying within the bounds of the contribution agreement, and there have been a number of contribution agreements over the 20 years or so of the history of the organization. When a government provides new money, as successive governments have done over the years, ISED would prepare the Treasury Board submission. We would do the work to get the authorities needed to execute the agreement with SDTC.
I'm just trying to be precise. There are two principal ways in which we intersect with SDTC. One would be the management of the contribution agreement, and the second would be through the government appointees to the board of directors.