Tag Archives: Gov. Rick Snyder

Update: Detroit Moves Forward with Bankruptcy Proceeding

This is a brief update to my earlier post that dealt with the city of Detroit’s Bankruptcy filing. In the earlier post entitled “A New Beginning or End for Detroit” I discussed the political and economic ramifications of the once proud city’s fall into the financial abyss known as a bankruptcy court. I have not wavered in my belief that the filing for bankruptcy was in Detroit’s best interests.

I was not surprised when Detroit filed for bankruptcy protection. The news outlets had reported the city’s financial problems for months. The economic situation in the Motor City was not only desperate, it was dire.  On July 18, 2013 the city’s Emergency Manager, Kevyn Orr, filed the petition with the court on behalf of Detroit. Since his appointment Mr. Orr had engaged in long and arduous negotiations with the city’s largest and most powerful unions and pensioners. Retirees who had long served the City of Detroit were sweating the negotiations. They worried that a bankruptcy filing could result in a drastic cut in the pensions and other vested benefits.  About 38% of Detroit’s annual budget was being spend on “legacy costs such as pensions and debt service. Orr’s cost cutting strategy was no secret; Detroit would cut 11.5 billion in municipal debt down to about 2 billion. Consequently if this cut was spread evenly across all the creditors, each would receive about 17% of what was owed them. Yet, not all the creditors stood on equally footing. Many of the creditors were people who made up the very fabric of the city. It might not be too easy (or politically expedite) to blow off their claims. We cannot ignore the fact some creditors had sacrificed more than 20 years of their lives into securing their investments.

Today, after a protracted and bitterly contested preliminary proceedings, Federal Judge Stephen Rhodes ruled that Detroit could move forward with its bankruptcy petition. Judge Rhodes denied the applications of pensioners, public unions, and other large impacted creditors to derail the filing. The court was keenly aware of Detroit’s deep financial problems. In addressing the magnitude of the problem Judge Rhodes stated that “This once proud and prosperous city can’t pay its debts. It’s insolvent…At the same time, it also has an opportunity for a fresh start.” In announcing his decision to a packed court, Judge Rhodes spoke for more than an hour and dwelled on Detroit’s illustrious past. Now Detroit must prepare a reorganization plan that the court will sign off on. Because of the more than 500 lawsuits against it, the city was forgiven for not negotiating in good faith prior to the filing.

The political landscape in Detroit has changed drastically since the filing of the bankruptcy petition. In my opinion it only made sense that the leaders and the political party that ran Detroit’s finances into the ground should be held accountable for the debacle.

The question that every seems to be asking is if racial considerations played a factor in Detriot’s fall from grace. Once the brash and politically savvy Coleman Young took over the mayor’s office, Detroit’s disenchanted Black community had their man in office. When the 1967 riots razed much of the inner city, Whites decided it was time to move to the suburbs. Soon they were followed by middle class Blacks who wanted safer neighborhoods and better public schools. As Detroit’s tax base dwindled, its revenues began to dry up. Detroit politicians kept borrowing money to keep up public spending. It was only a matter of time before the bad economics caught up with the politicians and city. In my opinion the filing of the bankruptcy also spelled the end to Detroit’s political élite.

On November 5, 2013 Detroit voters in record low numbers cast their votes in the mayoral election. They elected  Mike Duggan by a margin of about 10%. When he takes office in January 2014 he will become the first White mayor of the Detroit in the last four decades. Exit poll surveys and post-elections interviews revealed that Blacks did not vote along racial lines. Most Blacks voted for the candidate irrespective of his skin color that offered the best chance of restoring Detroit to respectability. Mayor Elect Duggan will assume office of a Detroit that is in bankruptcy, has a soaring crime rate, and who citizens are suffering from low morale. He will also have to deal with the thousands of pensioners who lost a substantial amount of their investments due to the bankruptcy proceeding. Perhaps Mayor Elect Duggan’s biggest challenge will be repairing the City’s relationship with the State Legislature in East Lansing. Some commentators say that Duggan is in a no-win situation; I disagree with this assessment. In my opinion Duggan takes over a city that cannot not sink any lower. The fact that he was elected mayor is the first step in the reclamation of Detroit.

A New Beginning or End for Detroit?

In 1960 Berry Gordy Jr. founded the record company Motown . The newly incorporate business was based in Detroit, Michigan. The City of Detroit has long been referred to by Americans and the international corporate world as the “motor city.” Motown had been setup in the very same city that America’s auto manufacturing companies had always called their home. I do not believe that it was a coincidence that Berry chose the name Motown, short for motor town, as the name for his new corporation. In the turbulent 60s Motown was instrumental in integrating popular music with a multitude of black artists whose music collectively became known as “soul music.” In 1972 Motown relocated to Los Angles where it remained an independent company until being sold in 1988. Motown’s run in the record industry was not only successful and profitable the company also left an indelible cultural mark on American society. The City of Detroit has not fared as well as its homegrown record company.

On March 1, 2013 Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder strode up to the podium at a called news conference to address Detroit’s fiscal mess. In the audience were members of the press, a handful the city’s political leaders and corporate officials of the beleaguered business sector. There was no suspense as to what the governor would talk about. Detroit was teetering on the brink of municipal bankruptcy. The Michigan governor had decided to take action to prevent a worsening of the city’s financial condition. Gov. Snyder prefaced his remarks by stating that no other city in the United States was a financially challenged as Detroit. He had determined that city’s “woes too fundamental, too lasting and too large to be solved by the city itself.” Much to the disappointment of local politicians the governor announced his intention to appoint an emergency financial manager (EFM) to oversee Detroit’s finances. The EFM would have broad powers to act on behalf of the public. Some of the city’s school districts are already under emergency management. The city faces more than 14bn in long term debt and has had chronic problems with available cash to meet payroll and other daily expenses.

To make matters worst for Detroit residents Forbes magazine designated Detroit as America’s most miserable city. Unemployment, violent crime and home values at historic lows guaranteed the city one of the top spots on the list. The added fact that the Motor City was on the verge of being taken over by a state appointed financial manager and has been

From The Business Insider

From The Business Insider

issuing debt to pay its daily expenses propelled the city into the top spot on Forbes’ list. Detroit has researched its statutory limit for issue debt. It cannot raise any more money and this has precipitated the crisis for the Gov. Snyder. In simple terms; Detroit is so broke. Seeing the city’s degree of decline in pictures is stunning.

Three years ago Mayor Bing was elected into office. He promised voters that he would turnaround the city’s finances. Every year since then he has had the support of the City Council. His initiatives have met little opposition. Yet, Mayor Bing who, like the governor is an accomplished businessman, has been unable to rein in Detroit’s runaway fiscal problems. Success as a businessman does not necessarily translate into success as a politician. The economic data does not lie; under Mayor Bing’s tutelage Detroit’s problems have grown and multiplied. The bad economy, cutbacks in state and federal aid and escalating pension and healthcare costs have exasperated the fiscal problems. Regardless of these factors I agree with the commentators and experts who point to Detroit’s city government’s incompetency, corruption and shortsightedness for bringing the city to this fiscal abyss. Politics and not economics seem to Detroit’s problem.