Government - Chicken or Egg - Chapter 2
On December 21, I wrote about the problems facing Detroit and some of the painful "solutions".
Today, the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News both ran front page stories about the financial crisis that has forced mayor Kwame Kilpatrick to announce the layoff of nearly 1,000 city employees... despite this being an election year for mayor. The Detroit News also ran a series of related articles:
Financial calamity worsened over years
As I stated in that previous post:
Detroit's tax plan faces tough sell
Workers, residents fume over Detroit layoffs
...Detroit has been in decline for 1/2 a century and any turnaround must either be based on a total change in government... or a turnaround will take at least 1/2 century given current government processes.Quite honestly, Detroit does have a downtown in revival. But too many areas within the city's borders are simply too run down and unattractive to anyone foolish enough to consider moving to Detroit. The map of vacant properties linked to in the December 21 article shows a fact that cannot be ignored: the city is in a profound state of decay. If a human had osteoporosis to the extent that the city has vacant and abandoned property, every bone in his body would be fractured or about to be so. The city is incapable of healing itself.
Fact: the city's taxes are among the highest in state (including an income tax). Raising taxes will exacerbate the problem.
Fact: the city's residents are among the poorest educated in the state. They do not represent a dynamic resource for rebuilding... and even they are leaving.
Fact: the city's services are burdened with Labyrinthian processes while struggling under union rules that allow 5 to do the work of 1... a situation often dramatized by hidden camera reports on local television. Firing workers without changing the basic processes or work rules invites further deterioration.
Fact: the State of Michigan is already strapped for money. Taxpayers might consent to higher taxes for keeping the state government running under present programs... but taxpayers would most certainly rebel against a bailout of Detroit... especially without a complete restructuring of all aspects of Detroit's government.
I don't see any reason to change my assessment of December 21.