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lorchand 5 posts
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Born, raised and still residing in Detroit, I have seen it all. Some things are cyclical and there is a purpose behind it. You had my parents and their parents generation who wanted their children t
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I was planning and in talks to do a Detroit soul weekender there for 2015 with various artirts's to perform .. be good to help Detroit out if we can .
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As a native and still residing Detroiter, I have my views. After I've finished with Pied Piper, I'll chirp in here. Lorraine
-------------------- Detroit Is Bankrupt -------------------
The Motor City has hit the buffers, it's been a long time coming. For those of us that have been visitors there for many years the continual decline of this once great city has been sad to see. The roots of this lie as far back as the as the early 1960's with the driving of the interstates through the city, isolating area and laying the seeds for the growth of ghettos. This was then compounded by the first round of auto industry contraction, rise in unemployment and hitting a peak with the 68 riots and 'White Flight'.
In the 1970 it didn't get any better, with continued middle class flight of all ethnicities, large numbers of Vets coming back from Vietnam with drug problems, the deprivation and violence just spiralled out of control, Detroit City was no longer the city of dreams, but now the murder capitol of the U.S. To add insult to injury through all this time it also had to suffer a succession of both incompetent and in many cases corrupt 'City Fathers', the administration just added to the problems.
This is not to say that all of Detroit is in trouble, this bankruptcy only applies to Metro Detroit & the city of Highland Park (the real Motown). Much of greater Detroit is fine. But downtown is in trouble at an administrative level. It continues to operate at a basic level, there is a Police force, but they have some of the worst response times in the U.S., the trash is collected, some of the time, the schools still open, but only as a basic function.
Is there light at the end of the tunnel, no one really knows. On a 'Off Gride' level the city is vibrant, still exciting and over 700,000 still live there and many by choice. But with such a small tax base, the current $12b deficit can not be over turned, without major Federal help. There is a building boom for high end condos, the major sports teams have all return to the city and the casinos are booming. But all of this is happening ad hoc with no over arching plan, no strong leadership.
I still love the city and hope for a brighter future, but this news is a sad day for the city.
Edited by Dave Thorley