I certainly can do that.
You won't see a lot of the costs in the estimates. There's some of that money.... For example, there's roughly $10 million that's earmarked—Mr. Limoges will correct me if necessary—for the mail itself, including prepaid postage. For the first time, we will have prepaid postage for the mail-in ballots, so that people do not abstain from voting due to that reason. That's one expense.
We've also procured additional machinery to prepare and assemble the kits before they're sent out. There's an additional expense for that. I believe it's around $900,000, but we can confirm that.
Most of the work is not about expenses. It's about designing the process and reviewing the procedures. We will have a decentralized process. I think I explained that when I appeared last time, so I apologize if I'm repeating myself.
It's critical for us to be able to manage what we think will be up to five-million mail-in ballots, and to break that down in chewable chunks. To deal with that, we will deal with it locally. Each returning office will have additional staff and space to receive and process applications and then to process the count. That's essentially the strategy for the national election.