That was my downfall actually, once again, downfall and mixed blessing. As we talked about earlier, the city became very dependent on SEEDA funds, where all through the city and the zoo, positions were funded and then in 78, the city wound up having a physical financial crisis where there had to be cuts in budgets. They weren’t getting the revenue. I don’t remember if there was a recession or something economically changed the city. So what happened was they knew they had to lay off people. Now the city was paying for one director, one general curator and one curator zoologist, but we wide up hiring. We had like three curators going, one general curator and one zoologist. Well under the SEEDA regulations, if you have layoffs, you can’t lay off a regular employee and keep their SEEDA counterparts, they didn’t want the institutions or the municipalities or the states to become that dependent on SEEDA, where they have no payroll.