Note - This article originally appeared on the website of Trebuchet Magazine and can be found here: http://www.trebuchet-magazine.com/detroit-just-bad-really/
No city evokes the sense of urban, industrial decay quite like Detroit. Once America’s fourth largest city, Detroit has fallen to eighteenth in the latest census, losing nearly a quarter of its population in the last decade alone. Houses stand empty and abandoned, often the victims of arson attacks and metal thieves. Packs of feral dogs roam the streets.. Unemployment hovers around 19%. Three of five children live below the poverty line, half of the city’s streetlights are no longer operational, and you could get a pizza delivered to your burgled house before the police get there.
Despite all this, Detroit is on the
up-and-up. Young professionals are moving back into the city centre. Artists
and musicians are taking advantage of the fact that property prices are at an
all-time low, and upscale shops like Whole Foods are settling in to Midtown. Friends
of mine recently bought a house in the historic Corktown neighborhood, just
outside downtown – three bedrooms, two bath – for $60,000. Detroit has a wealth
of art and cultural experiences still at hand.
It is criminal how overlooked this
post-industrial gem really is, and I’m here to change that. In the first of this
two-part series, I’ll be looking at the city’s rise and fall. How did Detroit
go from industrial behemoth to Mad Max-inspired
wasteland? Does it really play host to a secret race of mole-people? Just how
bad is it really? In the second, I’ll
try to convince you that, yes, Detroit is a city that is worth your time.
Much of early America’s wealth came
from the vast untapped resources at its disposal. Detroit started out as a
French fur trading post back when beaver skin top hats were all the rage. The
city grew throughout the 19th Century as several Gilded Age resource
barons took advantage of Michigan’s timber fields and copper deposits. However,
it took a transport and manufacturing revolution for the city to really take
off. In 1903, Henry Ford founded the Ford Motor Company, a move that would turn
Detroit into the world’s automotive capital, The Motor City.
As a manufacturing powerhouse, the
city became a key component in America’s “arsenal of democracy,” during World
War II. Detroit alone accounted for nearly one-quarter of the United States’
tank production over a five-year period. After the war, factories transitioned
from planes and tanks back to automobiles, spurring a car culture and suburban
sprawl that would eventually lead to the city’s undoing. As the burgeoning
interstate highway system clawed its way through the city, massive concrete,
six-laned arteries took middle-class families out of the crowded city center
and into an ever-sprawling suburbia.
Detroit was at its zenith in the
1960s. Over two million people called the city home and enjoyed the country’s
highest income per capita. By 1960, one in six Americans were employed directly
or indirectly by the auto industry, but it wasn’t all blue-collar car guys.
Culturally, Detroit could compete with any other American city in terms of
music, art, and entertainment. Motown Records started up in Detroit in 1959,
cranking out 110 top ten hits in a decade. Diana Ross, The Four Tops, The
Jackson 5, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, The Temptations – all hit it big
recording in the Motor City.
Today the city’s music scene might
be better known for Sixto Rodriguez, the aged folk guitarist who was at the
center of the Academy Award-winning documentary Searching for Sugar Man. His Establishment
Blues (1970) spoke to Detroit’s slowly evolving political/economic crisis as
the latter half of the century unfolded –
“Garbage ain’t collected, women ain’t protected
Politicians using people, they’ve been abusing
The mafia’s getting bigger, like pollution in the river
And you tell me this is where it’s at.”
He wrote those words a few years after the Twelfth Street
riot, one of the most destructive civic disturbances in American history. Over
the course of several days 43 died, over 1000 were injured, and more than 2000
buildings were destroyed. The riots prompted massive urban flight, especially
of the white population, to the outlying suburbs.
The
city had always had its racial tensions, as did most of the Midwestern United
States during the Great Migration, the movement of former slaves from Southern
states to Northern manufacturing towns at the turn of the century. The competition
for low-skill, blue-collar jobs was fierce and helped to radicalize a strong
following for the Ku Klux Klan. However, the death knell for any chance at
racial integration in Detroit came not through violence or race hatred, but
through a 1974 Supreme Court case, Millikan vs. Bradley, which held that de
facto racial segregation in schools, through district housing policies and
redlining (charging blacks more for banking credit, health insurance, etc.) had
to prove intent to be considered in violation of US law. In other words,
policies that produced overlapping class and racial inequalities were not
segregationist. This all but guaranteed white flight from Detroit’s inner city,
as anyone with money fled to more affluent areas.
By the time the 1980s rolled
around, Hollywood gave us Robocop,
Paul Verhoeven’s hyper-violent (for the time) cop flick about a crime-ridden
hellhole where mega-corporation Omni Consumer Products own the police, and
mafia bosses share power with business execs.
Sci-fi dystopia is meant as a
warning. It should never be this prescient.
As housing prices plummeted,
property taxes did as well. Services suffered. Police and fire systems faced
severe cuts. The city tried to raise taxes to offset lost revenue, prompting
even more migration into neighboring, lower-tax counties, thus further eroding
the tax base. Despite falling population, the city had difficulty cutting
services to match their diminished needs and continued to fund lucrative
pension schemes on a borrowed dime. The city now has twice as many pensioners
as public employees, and it can hardly afford to pay any of them.
Desperate to clean up the pension
problem that hammered any chance at a balanced budget, in 2005, Detroit Mayor
Kwame Kilpatrick engineered
a $1.44 billion deal with Wall Street, leaning on derivatives and complex credit
swaps to fund the failing pension schemes. The deal imploded with the
financial collapse and now represents nearly one-fifth of Detroit’s $20 billion
debt.
(A quick sidebar on Kwame
Kilpatrick. If you, like me, love a good story about slowly unfolding,
long-running train wrecks of hilarious, humiliating, brazen, and absurd
corruption. You will love Kilpatrick. Detroit’s mayor from 2002 to 2008, he was
recently sentenced to 28 years in prison for crimes including mail fraud, wire
fraud, racketeering, obstruction of justice, and tax evasion. Beyond the blatant
corruption, he is probably best known for hosting a party at the mayoral
mansion that involved several exotic dancers. When Kilpatrick’s wife returned
home early, she attacked one of the women, Tamara Greene AKA ‘Strawberry,’ and
sent her to the hospital. Days later, Strawberry was murdered in what
investigators suspected was a deliberate hit by a member of the Detroit Police
Department. Kilpatrick continually meddled in the case, removing special
investigators and costing the city millions in wrongful termination lawsuits.
Kilpatrick’s full biography really has to be seen to be believed.)
Today, Detroit is on the verge of a
historic bankruptcy case, one that will decide the future of the city. The
Republican governor of Michigan has appointed a bankruptcy lawyer to govern the
city’s finances. If the city defaults, pensioners will receive pennies on the
dollar for their retirement plans, the city will be forced to cut even more
essential services, and the Detroit Institute of Arts may have to sell off some
of its impressive collection of modernist and post-modernist art to keep the
doors open.Despite all of this, the city is
still an impressive monument to a specific time and place in American history,
and, I firmly believe, it is on the up and up. I have recently spent several
days in the city, and I fell in love with it. In the next article, I will tell
you why you should check it out and why a city that is so far gone still has so
much left to offer.
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