The $1.4 million was necessitated due to the commission’s having to recommence public hearings for an additional three days in order to receive submissions on the infectious salmon anemia virus. That contributed to the need to have some additional costs for commission counsel, the preparation of transcripts, translation services, as well as counsel for the participants that are receiving funding.
In addition, the commissioner has indicated that the final report is going to probably be at least double the page length of what he initially thought it was going to be. That's driven primarily by the scope and complexity of the issues the commissioner is addressing, so that's the typical stuff for the cost of writing and drafting of the report—the editing, the translation, and those sorts of things.