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Teh One Who Knocks
07-19-2013, 12:53 PM
Douglas A. McIntyre - USA Today


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If the residents of Detroit want to blame any person or organization for its Chapter 9 filing, they only need to look as far as the unions that controlled labor there and the politicians who ran it the past four decades. Detroit earned its bankruptcy the easy way — through greed, the desire for political power and poor planning.

Kevyn D. Orr, the city's emergency manager, offered interested parties a likely way to avoid the bankruptcy filing just weeks ago. Employees of Detroit, past and present, could share the pain of the restructuring of financial obligations with bond holders. Each blamed the other for the city's problems. Each said the other should absorb the brunt of a restructuring. Neither budged. Orr ran out of options, as two city pension funds went to court to try to protect their assets, motivated by a final grab for Detroit's money.

The media's take on Detroit was to post pictures of rundown and vacant homes and to publish the estimates of Detroit's obligations — about $19 billion. The press also has pointed out the clear conclusion that bond owners will take cents on the dollar.

Unions will have parts of pension obligations voided. City workers will lose their jobs. The two largest employers in Detroit are the school system and the city itself.

These workers dwarf the number employed by General Motors and Chrysler. Ford barely has a presence in Detroit any more.

Detroit is a city where the employee base is tilted away from private enterprise — a rarity, if not a uniqueness.

Another fact the media mentions as it measures Detroit's fall from grace is the drop in its population from 1.8 million in 1950 to just above 700,000 in 2010. In fact, if only those two points in time are the basis of an analysis, it is misleading.

The city's population did not start to fall sharply until after 1970. The 1973 oil crisis that rocketed gas prices up and the deep recession of the early 1970s dealt Detroit's car industry a blow that made the size of the city's government unsustainable.

Detroit's tax base began to tumble. Anyone among union leaders and elected officials could look at the numbers. The costs to sustain Detroit as it had been for two decades were impossible to maintain.

But the city kept spending. Unions wanted to keep their power as well as preserve jobs. Politicians did not want to admit they were running a dying city, say as much to voters and begin a battle with unions to lower labor costs.

Both parties are to blame. Which should be blamed more cannot be measured exactly. Bond holders do not deserve the kind of responsibility that those who ran Detroit do. However, they, and their bankers, were willing to keep the city afloat by buying paper that was risky. They took the risk and fed Detroit with money. Now, they get to take the sort of damage that goes with risking to much, too often and for too long.

As the people of Detroit and experts tear apart the history of iconic American city, some blame will be placed with the car companies. But they built Detroit — Detroit did not build them. It is not fair to say they destroyed her.

These public corporations, with obligations to shareholders, may have been among the few wise parties. The Big Three automakers exited slowly, as city services dissolved and Detroit became a less desirable place to live and do business.

Detroit's elected officials have lost all of their power. Orr has it, and soon a court will. Unions and their members can only wait to see how badly they will will be gored as part of the Chapter 9 process.

All of them knew a long time ago that the city was beginning to founder and each party tried to hang on to as much money, and privilege, as possible. Now, each gets to suffer the consequences.

KevinD
07-19-2013, 01:17 PM
Chi-town is next.

Richard Cranium
07-19-2013, 01:26 PM
Ghetto democrats and unions, match made in heaven.

Arkady Renko
07-19-2013, 03:08 PM
Same as most of germany's Ruhr area where the coal and steel industry used to be. They're in denial since about 1970 or so.

Loser
07-19-2013, 08:37 PM
Chi-town is next.

Fkin' A right it is, and they deserve it.

Noilly Pratt
07-19-2013, 08:52 PM
I didn't know a city could declare bankruptcy.

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Teh One Who Knocks
07-19-2013, 08:54 PM
Ron Recinto - Yahoo! News


DETROIT — It took less than 24 hours for the legal wrangling to start around the Detroit bankruptcy filing.

First a county judge ruled the filing unconstitutional under Michigan law.

Then the state's attorney general said he would appeal the ruling and asked that the judge's orders be stayed until the appeal.

Ingham County Circuit Court Judge Rosemarie Aquilina said the bankruptcy filing violated the state's constitution, which she says prohibits actions that will lessen pension benefits of public employees, including those in Detroit.

She ordered Gov. Rick Sndyer to ask Emergency Financial Manager Kevyn Orr to immediately withdraw the bankruptcy filing and that no further Chapter 9 bankruptcies be filed that threaten pension benefits of public employees.

“I have some very serious concerns because there was this rush to bankruptcy court that didn’t have to occur and shouldn’t have occurred,” Aquilina told the Detroit Free Press.

Later in the day Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette said he will appeal Judge Aquilina’s ruling and ask for a stay so that the bankruptcy can proceed until the appeal is heard.

Aquilina has a Democratic background. Gov. Snyder is a Republican.

Earlier in the day, an adamant and focused Snyder said that he decided to authorize the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history because “now is our opportunity to stop 60 years of decline” in Detroit.

Snyder cited years of financial mismanagement, deterioration of city services and a decade of having the worst crime rates in the nation as reasons to file for bankruptcy.

“The city is basically broke. It is $18 billion in debt,” Snyder told a packed news conference at Wayne State University in Detroit.

It was the governor's first public appearance since the filing of a 16-page document on Thursday to place Detroit in Chapter 9 federal bankruptcy protection.

The expectation is that the bankruptcy will allow Snyder, Detroit city leaders and Emergency Financial Manager Kevyn Orr to set aside lawsuits and work on gaining financial stability for the beleaguered city by offering protection from creditors and unions.

Snyder said the decision to file for financial protection was a difficult one but one that had to be made.

"It’s been a long period of decline," he said. "It’s time to do something about it."

Orr, who spoke to the media alongside Snyder, blamed years of mismanagement on the city's economic decline.

"The depth of some of the practices ... and the tolerance of this behavior for decades is at it's best, unorthodox," said Orr, who was given 18 months when he took office in March to find a financial fix for the city. "I wish there had been a lot more outrage over the last 10 to 20 years."

The pair took questions from local and national media for about 45 minutes behind a simple podium adorned with a photo of the city's iconic skyline and the slogan "Reinventing Detroit."

Several of the questions focused on which of Detroit's prized assets, or city "jewels," including artworks and city parks, would be sold to appease creditors.

"Right now there is nothing for sale, including Howdy Doody," Orr said referring to the TV puppet that is in storage at the Detroit Institute of Arts that some say is worth $1 million.

Synder touted the investment in the city from benefactors such as Quicken Loans chairman and Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert, who has bought up millions of square feet of real estate in the heart of the city and has invested about $1 billion to move the city into a technology hub of the Midwest.

He also named Detroit Tigers and Red Wings owner Mike Ilitch for years of investment in the city and a new commitment to build a new hockey arena downtown.

"There are so many tremendous things going on," Snyder said. "Young people are moving to Detroit."

Both Synder and Orr said the process will involve working with creditors, pension fund managers, civil servants, citizens and government leaders to improve neighborhoods and get the city back on a solid financial foundation.

"People may say this is the lowest point in Detroit's history," Synder said. "This is the day to stabilize Detroit."