 We're here at Goodway Farm with Jake Gronevelt and his family farm, students from the Prince Charles Kindergarten class, and we're learning about where milk comes from, but we're also celebrating the fact that thanks to an additional one million dollars in funding to the Agriculture in the Classroom program, students right across British Columbia are going to have access to milk on a regular basis. That's great news for them, and great news for the dairy industry in BC. Thirty-seven percent of Canadian children between the ages of four years and nine years of age fail to get the required amount of dairy products in their daily diet, and for us as a society that's not acceptable because obviously these children have growing minds, growing bodies, and we want to make sure they have the right nutrition. Agriculture in the Classroom is actually a registered non-profit whose mission is working with educators to bring BC's agriculture to our students, and so what we try and do is provide teachers with the tools and the programs they need in order to be able to bring the agriculture story directly to their students. It's extremely important to connect the kids to those family farms so they understand where the food is coming from. We've been doing that for about eight years with the Fruit and Veggie program. Today we're announcing a million dollars over the next three years to add milk to that program. So it's going to be a great addition to what the kids learn in their classrooms and also to help them start those healthy habits today that will take them throughout their lifetime.