Even with all of the bright spots in Detroit—all the redevelopment projects, all the stories of new businesses and residents relocating back downtown—there’s a one large, continually growing cloud hanging over the city.
Detroit is almost out money.
And the man I thought would be able to get the city through this mess, along with a newly elected City Council I had so much faith in, seem to be letting me down—letting this city down.
At its core, the mayor’s emergency restructuring plan aims to cut spending $102 million over the next six months and avert a cash-flow crisis. To get there, Bing says, he would lay off 1,000 city employees and the unions would need to agree — by as early as next week — to reopen contracts and accede to 10-percent cuts in pay, a 30 percent employee share on health care premiums, pension restructuring, work rule changes and reduced overtime.
Today’s Detroit News reporting that now Bing has said he’s “ready to go to war” with City Council in order to implement his sweeping cuts and layoffs. Is this the kind of rhetoric though that’s really going to get things done? Has it really come to this?
How can the Mayor and the City Council be so desperately unwilling to work together?
“There’s a big difference intellectually between my staff and them; there’s a big difference operationally between my staff and them,” he continued. “They haven’t run anything. I am open and willing to work with them, but I am not taking direction from them. We’ve got to get away from politics.”
Read the full story here.
Photo by John T. Greilick / The Detroit News
