Chicago is next. $40 Million in police OT a year. Only 45% of the cities pensions funded.I think Detroit tipping into bankruptcy may be a tipping point and I think the municipal financing issues warrant its own thread.
Thoughts on who's next (if any)??
What's the extension for Detroit? I can't find them anywhere in the directory.
I foresee good things for this thread.
Thoughts on who's next (if any)??
I strongly disagree with your hypothesis, you warthog faced baboon! ;-)
I'm not sure there's any solution to a situation like Detroit's. A dying Rust Belt city that's been on the skids for decades due to a loss of manufacturing jobs. Frankly that could be a dozen cities in the US (Buffalo, Cleveland, Akron, Gary, St. Louis, Rochester, etc). Have any been able to revitalize themselves? Think of older cities in the US that are doing well (SF, Chicago, NY, Boston, DC). Usually there's something specific to them that's tough to replicate. Nobody wants to move to Detroit, and the city isn't going to grow from the inside.
To answer joecct's question, I'd say Buffalo is next.
I'm not sure there's any solution to a situation like Detroit's.
The biggest problem in the long-term in the schools. You can get young professionals and artsy fartsies to live in downtown and midtown, but as soon as they get married and start thinking about kids, those people are going to bolt for the 'burbs unless they can fix the city school system.
Long-term, there certainly is. The current problem is trying to pay off pensions from when the city had a population of 2M, with a population of maybe 700k. There's just no way to make that work, regardless of what you do with taxes/city management. Those liabilities are crippling right now, but won't be there forever one way or another. Once they get out of that hole, the downtown area has been undergoing a nice rebirth in recent years. There's still some problems to fix, but I think their biggest issues are temporary, not permanent.
I believe pensions are only $3.5-5 Bn of the $20Bn problem, although perhaps that's not the full extent. Regardless I think the city's problems are far deeper than most. The city is a run down sh ! thole aside from a few blocks downtown. Crime is rampant and 40% of the place is abandoned dwellings. The only two corporations left are GM and Quicken Loans which isn't enough to sustain a city of that size.
So the problem becomes what goes into Detroit to get it back on its feet? I personally can't see where the jobs are going to come from, and if there's no jobs there's no turnaround.
I believe I saw something where someone bought a Detroit foreclosure for $1.
I believe it and actually that's not as uncommon as we'd like to think. If the neighborhood has nothing but abandoned property, and the bank can unload it and not have to keep paying the carrying costs, it might was well sell for a buck. While the copper pipes may be worth more than that, most have already been stripped out of the walls at this point anyway.