retail area being the lowest and visitation valley, lee land street, i believe it was, being the highsest at 16.9%. we also reviewed some of the approaches being used in other cities. in chicago, there's sort of a two-pronged approach. one is economic development and funding for particularly neighbourhoods that have had a hard time filling vacant, commercial spaces. it is called the neighbourhood opportunity fund. they collect money from downtown developers who, in exchange, get density bonuses and some of those funds are used to provide capital to businesses in hard-hit neighbourhoods. the retail thrives zones is another programme and that involves reduced property taxes for certain businesses that meet hardship criteria. and competitive grants to enable them to repair and improve their properties to enable them to be october pieed again. but on ten forcement side, chicago also has a more stringent registration and fee programme than we see here. there they require fees to be paid every since months on vai cants or abandoned property. here we're on a one-year cycle. and here the vacancie