Because they asked me to (laughs). I mean, I like to think of myself as an ethical person. And I think the Oregon, at that point when I was on it and a little bit before, the ethics of what you could do in a zoo were changing from the old guard where I put together for the Ethics Committee what I called the case law book, because they had all these ethics charges had come before them. Nobody ever could see in one place ’cause they obviously weren’t out there for the public, but I went through them all, each case, what it was about and what was decided so that the current Ethics Committee would have some case law, if you will. And it was amazing on the early cases that one zoo director was charging another zoo director with sending him a whole trunk load of bad chicken or something like that to feed his animal. I mean, just crazy stuff and it was solved by him having to send the other guy some chickens. I mean, it was just silly things when you look at it, but I just felt like if we weren’t gonna take ourselves serious as a profession, I felt very serious about what I was doing and there were still guys in the business then that were just, they were municipal zoo directors with the city bend, they kind of really did belong in the Parks and Rec Department and it was time that we conduct ourselves.