We've had a soil contamination problem, and our steel bids came in pretty dramatically over what we thought the estimate was going to be. Between those two, we've exhausted a good part of our contingency fund.

I'm not sure we as a community are spending the kind of resources we need. The public sector needs to step forward. And I think that's a good use of public dollars because this activity creates jobs.

The Hurst company has indicated that they are going to fight us all the way to the highest court in the land if we can't reach agreement, and that would be a good two-year process. So, we felt it's important to start this proceeding today, because we have a responsibility making sure this stadium gets done on time.

Realistically in the compressed time frames that probably is not going to happen. We're probably going to end up building a parking garage in range of 800 to 1,000 spaces.

Sports plays a critical role in the culture of business decision makers in the state -- where to locate plants, where to grow, where to make investments. Indianapolis is now on the list, where it never was before.

It's taking a long time, but both sides are proceeding in good faith and hope to get this resolved.

That's the $64,000 or million question.