remediation. shuttered facilities, things like that. now they are going to use this money to shift it to blight remediation so that they can shift and turn a different $100 million to pay for detroit's unfunded pension. and the blight that i'm seeing around here that needs remediation is the decades of fiscal irresponsibility by detroit politicians and their friends and big labor who got detroit in this mess in the first place. >> right, so paying for pensions that were never affordable in the first place is detroit really just the tip of the iceberg? are we going to see this in other cities? some people are argued that i don't know that we have seen that in other cities just yet but will we see it? >> clayton, that is exactly what the fear is here. detroit is the tip of the iceberg. they have 3. a billion in unfunded pension liabilities. that seems like a lot. but it's nothing compared to our nird unfunded pension liability of cities and counties to the tune of half a trillion dollars. and it's cities that would surprise you. it's not just the chicagos and philadelphias of the world. it's also omaha, nebraska.