I want to add this. When the federal government set up the Co-operative Development Initiative, the small sums that were distributed throughout each of the provincial councils and each province, to help with the start-up costs of an advisory service, did provide a boost.
A number of provinces had absolutely no support mechanisms whatsoever, either for the movement or for cooperative development. The program gave the movement leverage with the provincial governments. What that little bit of funding also did was make the governments aware of the cooperative movement and cooperative development. They saw the involvement of the federal government in that arena. Should we not examine how economic development takes shape within our jurisdiction and how it takes shape elsewhere? So you saw an increasing commitment by the provinces towards cooperative development from that point forward.