Friday, December 31, 2010
Census Results: Lost Decade, Lost Population
The growing Michiganian diaspora and loss of talent is troubling. Some say we can try to tap ex-Michiganians, but unlike so many countries losing their best to America, our state receives no remittances from former residents. Maybe we can do more to attract investment from non-resident Michiganians, like India courts NRIs, but that would requrie a lot of effort from the public sector.
Given its population loss, Michigan is also losing a Congressional Seat. This is no surprise, but given the Republican domination of all branches of government, the gerrymandering will not be pretty. While it is refreshing to see the Republicans shower our state with many powerful chairmanships, it is likely that their redistricting will cost us a Democratic star in two years, much like we lost Bonior ten years ago. That being said, perhaps it is a good opportunity for some membes of our old guard (Dingell, Conyers, S. Levin) to call it a career and make way for the next generation of leaders. Democratic control of the House may be a ways off, but we might as well take the opportunity to develop seniority in new members. http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Society/2010/1222/What-s-up-with-Michigan-US-Census-shows-its-population-stuck-in-reverse
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
A new day in Michigan
The Republicans won in a landslide in Michigan as they did across the country. Frankly, I think if Democrats had campaigned solely on the auto bailouts, not a single Republican would have won anything in the state. In the end, however, Democrats shied away from their strengths in Michigan as they did across the country, letting the Tea Party and the Party of No dictate the conversation, and they paid the price. I just hope the rest of us don't pay as well.
Because of the bloodbath on the Democratic side, Republicans will be able to freely gerrymander most of the country, including Michigan, after this latest Census. This is a perverse twist to our democracy, discouraging compromise and promoting extremism in both parties. Indeed, gerrymandering cost Michigan David Bonior (and a shot at the Speakership) in the last go-around.
Still, it is not all doom and gloom. Our Governor-elect, Rick Snyder, certainly has many characteristics that will serve him, and the state, well during his administration. Business acumen, pragmatism, and a willingness to work with others would be a good change of pace, after years of incompetence in Lansing. Having a unified government will at least ease the gridlock of years past - our new government will certainly get things done. I just hope they are the right things. I especially hope that they realize we have already been cutting bone, let alone fat. I eagerly await the day a politician has the courage to call for higher taxes and campaign on that...certainly we can spend and tax smarter, but simply cutting is not an answer.
On a positive note, Governor-elect Snyder has put out a call for Michigan's talent to join him in rebuilding our state. Thousands have already applied for a few hundred spots, but that shouldn't stop you from putting your name in for consideration: http://www.governorelectricksnyder.com/jobs/overview
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Pistons to Detroit, or Red Wings to Palace?
If he does buy the Pistons, Ilitch would control 3 of the 4 major sports teams in southeast Michigan, along with most of the key entertainment venues. Ordinarily, such a monopoly could be sub-optimal (see Moroun's Bridge company). However, as some local commentators have suggested, Mr. Ilitch, while certainly in it for the money, deserves the benefit of the doubt. Certainly, I think Ilitch has proven himself to be a great sports team owner, and he would be good for the Pistons. I also think he is a proven investor in Detroit, and in the end, he will do right by the city. I am not going to say I think Ilitch buying the Pistons is the optimal scenario (I could imagine some benefits by having, say, another billionaire like Tom Gores, start to invest in the area), but the Pistons and Detroit could do much worse.
That being said, if the deal happens, there are still many possible ways it can unfold. If money were no barrier, it would certainly help revitalize the downtown/stadium area to have both the Pistons and Red Wings play in a new arena in the city (tens of thousands of people in the city for sports almost every other night, ~170 nights a year instead of ~130). However, in my view, neither the City nor Ilitch can afford a new stadium right now and credit is still tight, so I can't imagine anything coming up in Foxtown or anywhere else anytime soon. Maybe the Red Wings muddle along at the Joe, but they should probably move to the Palace for the short to medium term. The Palace is still in excellent shape and could easily host both the Pistons and the Red Wings for the next decade, so the Red Wings' stadium emergency is alleviated. In the long run, both teams should return to a new stadium in the city - maybe in 5-10 years, the City would be in better shape to support a new stadium, but even then, I don't think that the public should foot much (if any) of the bill. That being said, it certainly hurts Detroit's near term revitalization efforts to pull the Red Wings out temporarily - we just can't afford to spend that money right now. We'll see what happens.
Some other open questions on this topic:
- Would it be feasible or make sense for the Pistons or Red Wings to play most of their games in the Palace and a handful in the City (either at the Joe or Ford Field)?
- How could the Joe be incorporated into COBO's expansion plans, if it is abandoned by the Red Wings?
- Since the Palace will still likely be a highly functional facility in 5-10 years, would it be able to survive/thrive without either the Pistons or the Red Wings?
Monday, October 25, 2010
Help from New York
Time's Detroit Blog today posted about a group of Detroit expats living in New York City (a very heartening post: http://detroit.blogs.time.com/2010/10/25/only-635-miles-from-home/) who have started coming together to try and help the city from afar. One of the founders was working in a third world, central Asian republic, Kyrgyzstan, when she realized that Detroit needs just as much help, if not more. So far, it is focused on building networks and awareness, but it could become more. The effort (http://www.635mile.org/) has had a couple of meetings so far, and it could spread to other cities. It is also sending a delegation to Detroit in November for a "fact-finding" mission...it might present interesting inside-outside partnership opportunities.
That is only one of the NYC-based efforts helping Detroit that I read about today. The second effort is more indirect, through a global micro-grant site (kickstarter.com). Given the influx of artists to Detroit and groundswell of creative class activity, there are many art, film, and creative projects that can (and do) benefit from the funding opportunity presented by kickstarter.com. Detroit has been benefiting from out-sized donations for art-as-renewal projects by people around the world believing in Detroit and wanting to be part of the solution. For activists seeking to get started on a small project (e.g., micro-gardens maybe?), this could be a good start. This Free Press article has more details on the phenomenon: http://www.freep.com/article/20101025/NEWS05/10250375/1322/N.Y.-Web-site-gets-cash-from-all-over----a-lot-of-it-goes-to-Detroit
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
"Mower Gang", Reverse Vandalism, and Detroit Velodrome
Here is another positive headline of Detroiters taking improvement efforts into their own hands and not waiting for permits or bureaucracy or the police or funding: http://detnews.com/article/20100928/OPINION03/9280373/Renegade-rehabbers-get-Detroit-Velodrome-rolling
This group, the "Mower Gang", just started in August, and is cleaning up city parks that have been left to rot by the city. It looks like the most high profile project they have undertaken is to restore the Detroit Velodrome at Dorais Park (a bike racing track built in 1969, after the riots actually). They will have it ready for an ad hoc fundraising race on October 16.
It is encouraging to see that more and more people are taking matters into their own hands to fix Detroit. It is not some kind of anti-government Tea Party sentiment at work here I think, but rather, the realization that sometimes you have to take matters into your own hands and if you don't fix it, who will?
Some interesting highlights from the article:
"Billing itself on Facebook as "a crafty crew that refuses to let small budgets and bureaucracy stand in the way of a great playground," they set out to do good in a concrete way, without fuss."
"As the 23-year-old Didorosi says on the Thunderdrome website: "A lot of young people are starting to ignore their parents' warnings and rediscover a lot of great stuff (about Detroit)." "
Didorosi: "Ignore the past, ignore the rot, and just do: make, improve, fix."
Sunday, September 26, 2010
"Detroit Lives" documentary
Basically, the film got him to thinking that maybe the grand vision of Detroit's renaissance as imagined by the "corporate class" isn't the only way or even the best way to bring back Detroit. Maybe, the more direct, hands on, activist approach by the "creative class" is what can bring more lasting results.
The most key passage from his editorial:
"Where the smug urban pioneers of my generation settled in the best neighborhoods, this new breed thrives on Detroit's gritty side.
They're scraping and painting old houses and moving in. They're tearing boards off empty storefronts and opening micro businesses. They're mowing parks, planting gardens and painting murals without asking permission or waiting for master plans.
They have none of their parents' fear of the city, venturing well wide of downtown.
They've discovered Detroit is just the place for those with more ideas than money.
Their faces are often covered with beards and tattoos, but they get the same resistance as the suits do because those faces are mostly white. They break through by embracing Detroit for what it is, and staying in it day and night."
On a side note, the News is sponsoring a local premiere of the film this upcoming Wednesday. The showings will be at 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. at the Burton Theater, 3420 Cass. You can e-mail RSVP@notedcomm.com with "Detroit News" in the subject line, specifying which screening you want to attend, to RSVP.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Army of Detroit
I thought perhaps an "Army of Detroit" would be an interesting solution to Detroit's crime troubles. Much like the "surge" strategy employed by the US Army in Iraq and Afghanistan, I would like to see a strategic increase in civic activity, engagement, and even citizen watch patrols in targeted areas, gradually covering the whole city. On Angel's Night, Detroit sees tens of thousands of volunteers protect the streets and deter violence. Of course, it would be a massive challenge to secure so many volunteers year round, but by cleaning up one neighborhood after another with a smaller volunteer base, until the criminals are pushed out fo the city, I think it could work. The Army of Detroit would not just be citizen watch patrols (of which there are several throughout the city), but a concentrated dose of volunteerism, including tutoring, greening, and other engagement. By publicizing and promoting the effort, hopefully criminals will get the message and leave without too much resistance or conflict. At the end of a surge in a target neighborhood, ideally, the local citizens could take ownership of their own protection and well being.
As I mentioned, neighborhood watches are already in place in parts of the city. To some extent, they are successful. In a recent example, one neighborhood mobilized and formed an ad hoc coalition to successfully track down some brazen criminals. The people have power in their hands, if they chose to use it. I see two weaknesses in the current approach to neighborhood/citizen watches that the Army of Detroit could try to avoid. One is coordination – the watches are haphazard and I don't know that criminals are even aware they exist. A second issue is deterrence – for the most part, these watches are reactive and simply report crimes. The watchmen typically are not armed. However, I think that if all ~140 square miles of Detroit had two armed watchmen patrolling every hour of the day and night, criminals would have no place to go. There are risks, but doing nothing is a risk that has paid off poorly for Detroit…
To get something like this kickstarted, I had an idea to acquire a small apartment complex and offer free lodging to some residents in exchange for periodic neighborhood patrols. If I had other properties in the neighborhood, the rental and inherent value of these investments would rise, enabling me to fund further patrols.
This would take a lot of work, but I think the "Army of Detroit" could be quite fruitful.
What do you think?
(As an aside, the "army" imagery has also been adopted recently by a volunteer PR group looking to promote the city; they are less focused on security and more focused on image with their new group, but if their volunteer army expands beyond media into service, perhaps there is room for cooperation - http://www.mlive.com/news/detroit/index.ssf/2010/08/do_you_believe_in_detroit_adve.html)
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Why stay in Detroit?
"You're smart, you're talented, you've got new ideas.
In New York, you're a sparrow. In Detroit, you're a prized canary. This is Mecca for you, Mr. or Ms. Would-be Transplant, if you've got the brains and hustle to outwork and out-think the demoralized survivors of decades of renaissances that haven't taken root.
No other major metropolitan area will out-welcome Detroit's welcome. Give us your newcomers with moxie and talent. We'll mentor you, invest in you and invite you to parties.
The flip side of a shrinking Big Metro Area is that some problems shrink, too.
Like big city culture. Cultural attractions that require advance commitments and plans in other cities are a snap here. Whether you want to snag seats for an opera, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, a visiting ballet company or an NFL football game, you can almost always see it here without using bonus dollars or extra sweat.
You can see a Tigers game this weekend. Tell that to your brother in Boston. And the traffic? You can commute downtown in 20 minutes from 20 miles away -- choose the direction. My brother in Los Angeles can't imagine that.
Detroit's affordable. Really, really affordable.
Here, a young couple can become landed gentry -- house, backyard, good schools -- for a fraction of the cost in a similar community anywhere else. In these shrinking-city days, a shrewd would-be homeowner can pick up a tidy, three-bedroom suburban house for what one used to cost here 15 years ago.
Or, if you're young and adventurous, you can move into Detroit and try out the social consciousness and pioneer spirit progressive young adults mouth so easily from Portland, Ore., to Burlington, Vt. -- places that entertain them but no longer need them."
From The Detroit News: http://detnews.com/article/20100824/OPINION03/8240359/In-Detroit-area--young--talented-have-better-shot-at-being-heard#ixzz0xYzw5xjf
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Businesses taking up a challenge
According to this Detroit News article, apparently some companies are thinking along similar lines: http://detnews.com/article/20100722/OPINION03/7220393/1409/Third-World-aura-draws-businesses-to-Detroit
Some highlights:
"If urban turnaround hasn't always been at the top of corporate agendas, it could be moving up the scale, as the mystique of doing business thousands of miles away wears thin and high national unemployment rates create new empathy for Michigan's jobless.
In this climate, few cities offer more visibility or potential reward for such commitment than Detroit.
"Our clients are interested," says Bryan, whose privately held company specializes in health care data base management. "They're trying to contribute to the revitalization of Detroit." "
"Detroit, though, offers some of the low-cost benefits of doing business in the Third World. The rent at 1001 Woodward Ave. -- between $14 and $17 per square foot -- is rock-bottom for a major city.
Detroit's labor costs have dropped so far, even for technology workers, that Bryan tells his Fortune 500 clients they'll pay only 5 percent more to work through Detroit than to send their business to Brazil."
""It's an opportunity to turn around an American city," says Bill Emerson, the CEO of Quicken."
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Disaster - Asian Carp
Now, Obama, the Supreme Court, and Chicago/Illinois may be ready to sacrifice the Great Lakes for a few shipping jobs, but I, and most Michiganians, are not. Still, if they do nothing on their end, our lawmakers appear impotent to do anything...jurisdiction is jurisdiction after all. I think I may have a solution, however. It may be radical, will doubtless be the subject of lawsuits, but it is necessary, and we can do it in cooperation with the Canadians and other Great Lakes States who are on our side.
Here it is: Any ship going to or from Chicago, between the Great Lakes and Mississippi systems, must cross water controlled by either Michigan or its allies or dock in the territory of Michigan and its allies. Ships must either cross choke points at Mackinaw, Detroit, Port Huron, Sault Ste. Marie, or Buffalo or dock in Michigan, Wisconsin, or Indiana. I propose we ban any ship that has passed through Chicago's contaminated waters from passing the choke points controlled by Michigan's allies. I suppose an outright ban may be able to stand on environmental grounds (e.g., the ships may be contaminated with Asian Carp eggs - 10 year study needed to evaluate, and in the meantime there is a ban). Any ship caught in Michigan's waters from Chicago could be seized and destroyed. If an outright ban would be overturned, perhaps a $1 bn per ship penalty for ships coming from Chicago could be enacted. These are drastic measures to be sure, but I think they would quickly end the current Mississippi-Great Lakes ship traffic through Chicago as we know it - shippers would just find alternate routes (or simply offload from Mississippi boats, put on trucks, then put on Great Lakes boats in Chicago). With the paradigm shifted, Chicago would have no reason to keep the systems connected, and hopefully, they would act to permanently separate the systems.
What do you think? If you have a better solution, please share it!
Here are a couple of articles talking about this tragedy:
http://detnews.com/article/20100624/METRO/6240415/1409/Michigan-lawmakers-renew-war-on-Asian-carp
http://www.freep.com/article/20100624/NEWS06/6240387/1322/Carp-found-past-barriers-but-locks-will-stay-open
Friday, June 18, 2010
Happenings: Mackinaw Policy Conference, USSF, and Fireworks!
More notably, the US Social Forum will be coming to Detroit next week. It has been described as something similar to the World Economic Forum, but for more...egalitarian and progressive people. Certainly, there promises to be quite a few interesting sessions, though of course, there are also some questionable and odd ones. There is also an entire programmatic stream dedicated to Detroit. I would encourage everyone who has some time to pick some sessions and try to participate and learn something. Visit the site for more info: http://www.ussf2010.org/
Here is why they chose to have this big event in Detroit:
"To win nationally, we must win in places like Detroit. The Midwest site of the USSF marks a fierce resistance movement for social, racial, gender, and economic justice. Detroit has the highest unemployment of any major city in the country—23.2% (March 2009)—with nearly one in four Detroiters unable to find work. Michigan has had the highest number of unemployed people in all 50 states for nearly four years. Thousands of living wage jobs have been permanently lost in the automotive industry and related sectors. Some think that it will take at least until 2025 for Michigan to recover from the economic collapse and social dislocation.
What is happening in Detroit and in Michigan is happening all across the United States. Detroit is a harbinger for what we must do in our communities! As grassroots activists and organizers, we work to address the indignities against working families and low-income people, and protect our human right to the basic necessities of life. In Detroit, we can make change happen!
The US Social Forum provides this space—drawing participants from different regions, ethnicities, sectors and ages across the U.S. and its colonies. Community-based organizations, Indigenous nations, immigrants, independent workers organizations, unions, unemployed, youth, children, elders, queers, differently-abled, international allies, academics, and advocacy organizations will be able to come together in Detroit for dialogues, reflection and to define future strategies."
It seems like the USSF believes, as I do (though perhaps in a different way), that Detroit is ground zero for changing the world for the better. There is still hope, but it will be difficult.
On a more lighthearted note, it is that time of year where many people come to the city for the International Fireworks. The Free Press has prepared a guide if you are going to the city next Monday night (June 21st): http://www.freep.com/article/20100618/FEATURES01/100618029/1318/Detroit-River-fireworks-guide - tips to avoid the typical traffic/parking hassles, basically. Of course, if you don't want to go downtown (I went last year, and it was quite nice), a number of alternatives will be available over the upcoming weeks: http://www.freep.com/article/20100618/NEWS06/100618030/1318/
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Detroit Kids - Very Sad
I came across this last week, and thought I would share:
http://www.freep.com/article/20100516/NEWS01/5160413/High-lead-levels-hurt-learning-for-DPS-kids
http://www.freep.com/article/20100516/NEWS01/100514045/
http://www.freep.com/article/20100516/NEWS01/100514031/Map-shows-lead-levels-in-Detroit
We all know that Detroit's educational system is a mess, with an extremely poor graduation rate, near bankruptcy, etc. There is a lot of blame to go around, but maybe not as much as you might think. According to the Free Press, basically, about half the kids in Detroit Public Schools have a history of lead poisoning, which can cause cognitive and mental problems. It seems that, despite the hard work in put by everyone, the students and teachers of Detroit may be fighting this battle with one arm tied behind their backs...
Educational reform, best practices, Robert Bobb, etc. can only go so far in fixing this. Certainly, things can be better, but maybe not as great as we would hope.
Monday, May 3, 2010
Return of entrepreneurs
Needless to say, we need more of this. I think a lot of people with Michigan roots still have emotional ties to hope. We need to appeal to this emotion and help stem the flow/exodus of talent from our area. There is no way we can recover without more people like this.
This article in today's Free Press was also enlightening, describing how quickly parts of Detroit can fall into blight: http://freep.com/article/20100503/NEWS01/100503007/1322/Securing-Detroits-future-is-a-challenge. Mere hours after a house is abandoned, it can be ripped apart, left gutted for the arsonists. Certainly, after it is gutted, no one will buy it. Bing's plan to demolish houses is putting a bandaid on the problem - he can't tear them down faster than they are abandoned, I think...Another sad stat from this piece - only 8,000 people in the city made over $150 k last year...that is just awful.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Detroit's battered image
Most damning: "Six in 10 non-Michigan residents think Detroit and southeast Michigan is a poor place to live; one in two think it's a poor place to invest in, and one in three think the region is a poor place to do business" (http://freep.com/article/20100421/NEWS01/4210362/1320/Survey-Many-love-life-in-metro-Detroit)
On a positive note, about half of us love living in the area, despite its flaws. Also, almost one third of Metro-Detroiters go downtown weekly, and visiting among 18-34 year olds to downtown appear to be higher. Hopefully, the renewed interest in downtown by a younger demographic will help bring revitalization at last.
Full results can be found at www.thedetroithub.com
Friday, April 16, 2010
Best park
Campus Martius is small, just two acres, but a lot of activities happen there at various points of the year - if anything is happening downtown, it likely takes place (in part at least) at Campus Martius. Of course, the problem is, I don't believe it is terribly well utilized unless something is happening downtown.
It is too bad Belle Isle isn't just a little closer to downtown.
Now we just need to get Detroit's other parks in order...and maybe clear up some more nice park space downtown and midtown while we are at it.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Bad news...is Detroit as dangerous as Karachi, Juarez, Beirut or Baghdad?
Sure Detroit is not safe, but I don't think it is in the same category as a chaotic place like Juarez or Baghdad.
In other bad news, it looks like Cobo might NOT expand after all. It is nice that the new regional authority is showing some fiscal responsibility and is evaluating the NPV of expanding, after years of massive losses, but I don't think SEMI can afford to lose a signature event like the NAIAS. That is exactly what is at stake here. Seeing as the economic impact of the NAIAS runs in the hundreds of millions of dollars, I hope the regional board can conclude that expansion is worth it. It would seem like it is, if they don't just consider Cobo's own cash flow. I am afraid that they might not consider it, however...
http://freep.com/article/20100413/COL06/4130366/1318/
http://freep.com/article/20100413/BUSINESS06/4130312/1318/Cobo-Center-might-not-expand
On the positive side, it looks like more good news is coming out of Midtown (after DMC, Henry Ford mega investments). We will be getting a nice greenway belt around a 2 mile loop near Wayne State. Groundbreaking was today: http://freep.com/article/20100413/BUSINESS04/4130339/1322/Work-to-begin-on-Detroits-Midtown-Loop
Also, we will be hosting a massive congregation of activists this summer. 10,000 do-gooders like ourselves will be massing in Detroit, ground zero of the Great Recession. There's some economic impact for you...http://detnews.com/article/20100413/METRO01/4130344/Global-gathering-seeks-economic-solutions
Lastly, if you ever wondered what sections of Detroit Matty Moroun controls, the Free Press did a nice piece on it. Here it is: http://freep.com/article/20100411/BUSINESS04/4110471
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
U-M helps lay foundation for future of Detroit
Deborah Meyers Greene
Public Affairs
Through their work on the new Detroit Residential Parcel Survey (DRPS), the Ginsberg Center, the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, the university’s Detroit Center, and 26 current graduate students and recent alumni have played a foundational role in strategizing the city’s future.
Following a period of extended economic and cultural challenge that dates back to the 1950s, vast stretches of the city lay blighted or vacant.
“The harsh reality is that some areas are no longer viable neighborhoods with the population loss and financial situation our city faces,” Detroit Mayor Dave Bing said March 23 in his State of the City address. “Strengthening our city will take a long-term strategy for how we use Detroit’s 140 square miles more productively.”
DRPS data will help decision-makers identify exactly which neighborhoods are threatened by blight, which can be revived with support and which continue to thrive. This critical knowledge will help the city’s leadership determine “what areas of our city are best suited for residential use, commercial and industrial businesses, parks and green space,” Bing said.
“According to the survey, 86 percent of the city’s single-family homes are in good condition, and only about 9 percent require relatively minor repairs,” says Margaret Dewar, Ginsberg faculty director and professor of urban and regional planning at Taubman College. “This means that 95 percent of the city’s single-family housing stock should be suitable for occupancy.” The survey also found that 91,000 residential lots, or 26 percent, are vacant.
Carrying primary responsibility for fieldwork coordination, the Ginsberg Center utilized the university’s Detroit Center as a base of operations for the recruitment, training and supervision of 48 surveyors, who drove in three-person teams through every Detroit neighborhood during six weeks in August and September 2009.
Anticipating Bing’s promise that “every Detroiter has a voice and a role in this process,” at least one, and sometimes two of the three were current residents of the city. Together, they assessed and recorded the condition of approximately 343,000 residential properties housing from one to four families.
“It was an awesome experience,” says Robert Linn, a 2009 social science graduate of the Residential College, now in his first year of the Taubman College’s Master of Urban Planning Program. “I learned there’s a real debate, that there is not a singular vision for the city. Everyone has an opinion and a stake in the outcome.
“My family and friends from my old near-east-side neighborhood have one vision that people from the northwest or southwest sides don’t necessarily share,” says Linn, a native Detroiter and creator and host of the weekly “From Belle Isle to 8 Mile” jazz and soul music show, now in its fifth year on U-M student radio station WCBN.
“These are the best data ever accumulated on the city’s residential properties,” says Dewar, “and they have many uses.” One example is the 2010 U.S. census. The Census Bureau will use the data to help allocate staff who follow up with census non-respondents.
“The data also could help in decisions about where to locate city services like public safety and health resources, mass transit, garbage collection and more, like reshaping the public schools,” says Eric Dueweke, community partnerships manager at the Taubman College and overall site supervisor for the survey.
The data, which are accessible in the university’s Spatial and Numeric Data Services lab, promise to support current and future teaching and research. “We’re using the data in a class that Eric and I are co-teaching this semester,” Dewar says, “and I can see countless research applications for the future.”
DRPS was underwritten by the Detroit Economic Growth Association with funds coming from Living Cities, a philanthropic collaborative of 21 of the world’s largest foundations and financial institutions dedicated to improving the lives of low-income people in America’s urban areas.
DRPS is a project of the Detroit Data Collaborative, which includes the Detroit Office of Foreclosure Prevention and Response; Community Legal Resources, Detroit Vacant Property Campaign; Data Driven Detroit (formerly Detroit-Area Community Information System); and Living Cities.
Link: http://www.ur.umich.edu/update/archives/100412/taubman
Friday, April 9, 2010
"Fresh Food Access in Detroit -- A Community Action Panel"
-------------------------------------------
Ypsilanti Health Initiative and Public Health Students of African Descent present:
Fresh Food Access in Detroit -- A Community Action Panel
Tuesday, April 13
SPH II Room 1020
4:30-6:00
With the following speakers:
1. Meredith Freeman, Director of Fair Food Network Detroit
2. Russ Russel, Chief Development Officer of Forgotten Harvest
3. Dan Carmody, President of Eastern Market Corporation
Food will be provided!! Hope to see you there!!
Stefanie DeVita
MPH Candidate, 2011
Department of Epidemiology
University of Michigan School of Public Health
Noam Kimelman
Health Policy & Urban Planning
MPH & MUP Dual Degree Candidate, 2012
www.theyhi.wordpress.com
http://getfreshdetroit.blogspot.com/
617.459.1900
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Re-population vs. downsizing
There are a number of unconventional ideas I can think of to bring people back - here are a couple:
- We have become a low cost area - people live on less in Detroit than any other big city in America (http://detnews.com/article/20100324/BIZ/3240322/1001/Study-puts-Detroiters-at-bottom-of-nation-s-spenders) - we should promote this to attract businesses and people back, as you don't need to pay/earn to much to thrive in Detroit
- We could give away houses or land (or vacant office space) for free as incentives for people (or business to give to employees) relocating to Detroit - such land allocation is how the country awarded settlers during the 1800s (begging the pardon of the Native Americans), so I imagine that this tradition could work in Detroit as well - instead of sitting on ever increasing amounts of real estate or selling property for peanuts at auction, we can use these resources as tools to incent people to move to Detroit
- We could work out a deal with the US immigration department to fast track visas and green cards for people moving to the city
What do you think?
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Advice from all sides for Detroit
- Toni Griffin, a renowned urban planner, has been hired by the Kresge Foundation to help the city plan for and deal with downsizing: http://detnews.com/article/20100318/METRO01/3180406/Noted-urban-planner-coming-to-Detroit
- A study called "Global Detroit" lays out a plan to help revitalize the city through immigration; instead of downsizing, we should be attracting all the people who want to come to America - let them come to Detroit; this article discusses how immigrants are more likely to be entrepreneurial and have some of the skills we need in the City - http://detnews.com/article/20100318/OPINION03/3180422/ - instead of letting immigrants bypass the city straight for the suburbs, we should do more to attract them to the core...
- On the flip side, another article points out that attracting people and businesses to the city without overall regional growth is a zero sum game - cannibalism: http://detnews.com/article/20100318/OPINION03/3180338/1008/Without-growth--regionalism-is-cannibalism
- There was an interesting (private) discussion about the story of Detroit and how to better portray the city to help with the turnaround - http://ourdetroitstory.com/2010/03/03/taking-charge-of-our-story/ - it was webcast, so maybe a video is available
- Not surprisingly, Detroit Renaissance/MBL has come out with updated figures showing Michigan is last in economic growth; we are behind in 90% of economic sectors; Michigan still has competitive advantages, but we need to sell ourselves better: http://detnews.com/article/20100318/BIZ/3180365/1001/Study--Mich.-last-in-economic-performance
- Lastly, some interesting insights from a Wall Street guru - he thinks the real problem we are facing is the overborrowing and captivation with fake growth that came at the expense of our base, manufacturing like Detroit: http://detnews.com/article/20100318/METRO08/3180405/1439/METRO08/Wall-Street-guru-H.-Rodgin-Cohen-has-words-for-Detroit
Monday, March 15, 2010
Let's Save Michigan!
Thursday, March 11, 2010
A new day for Detroit Public Schools
Of course, mayor control did not necessarily work in the past (1999-2005 didn't work out at all). However, with the involvement of players like the Skillman, Gates and Kellogg foundations, I hope this time would be different.
Some links to articles covering this story:
http://freep.com/article/20100310/NEWS01/303100003/1318/Plan-for-Detroit-schools-Ambitious-transformation
http://freep.com/article/20100311/COL10/3110440/1318/
http://freep.com/article/20100311/NEWS05/3110446/1318/
In other news, it looks like the Silverdome is shaking off the mothballs. I am not sure how I feel about its reversion to stadium-hood (it has so much potential for other things too), but better than the wrecking ball. http://freep.com/article/20100311/COL06/3110462/1320/Vision-for-the-Silverdome
Monday, March 8, 2010
Cobo infusion
Here are the reports from the Free Press and News:
http://www.detnews.com/article/20100306/BIZ/3060312/1001
http://www.freep.com/article/20100304/NEWS01/3040439/1322/Meeting-planners-are-headed-to-Detroit-in-15
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Future for State Fair?
See the Free Press article for more details: http://freep.com/article/20100225/NEWS05/2250572/1318/Possible-land-lease-could-bring-back-the-state-fair
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Top airport
http://www.cnn.com/2010/TRAVEL/02/24/airport.satisfaction.study/index.html?hpt=T2
Monday, February 22, 2010
Going, going..back back..
Op-Ed Contributor
Snowbirds Come Home to Roost
By TOBy BARLOW
Published: February 20, 2010
RON AND PATTY COOLEY met and fell in love 42 years ago as students at Eastern Michigan University. After a stint at Ford in the early ’70s, they left Detroit behind, taking over her family’s modest real estate business upstate. The company prospered: for 30 years the two worked together, helping to finance, build and sell more than 1,000 homes.
With their two sons grown, Ron and Patty sold the business and semi-retired down to Naples, Fla. Ron took up golf, sometimes seven days a week, occasionally 36 holes in a day. Patty gardened. Their lives in the Sunshine State were relaxed and tranquil, the sort of serene ending that retirement brochures promise to us all. But, unsurprisingly, the collapse of the housing market had a serious impact on a couple with a nest egg tied up in real estate.
Ron and Patty looked around and did the math. Florida’s economy seemed to be declining even more steeply than the Motor City’s. In Detroit, they had roots, their sons had moved into the city and started a barbecue restaurant, grandchildren had arrived. So, weighing their options, they came back. They moved into a downtown loft, just a few blocks from the empty lot where Tiger Stadium once stood.
I first encountered Ron and Patty at an early morning fund-raiser for a neighborhood charity. Talking to them, I found that just like other new arrivals — the artists and recent college graduates coming here from other towns — they spoke of Detroit’s potential with an almost exalted optimism. Instead of depressing or slowing them down, the move has been a thrilling one and they shared examples of how exhilarating their life is downtown.
Being at the center of things means they can walk to the Avalon bakery on Saturday mornings and to the new Comerica Park for baseball games in the spring. Instead of endless golf, they now go to events like the fund-raiser where we met or lectures on design and sustainable development.
Talking about Florida, Ron sounds like someone who made it onto the lifeboat in the nick of time. Yes, they had to sell their home down there at a loss, but a former neighbor in Naples recently sold a similar house for less than half of what the Cooleys got. Ron estimates that with the nation’s battered 401(k) accounts, it could take decades before Florida returns to any sort of substantial growth.
Meanwhile, Patty and Ron are helping their sons expand their restaurant to a new location. Patty is involved in the local school system’s literacy program. Ron enjoys walking down the street to spend time with his grandchildren, the kind of time that, in his ambitious, younger days, he didn’t get to have with his own boys.
In the nation’s shared imagination, Detroit continues to be worse than a punch line — it’s an apocalyptic wasteland teetering right at the edge of the end of the world. When people hear that I live downtown, they ask, “Where do you get your groceries?” and “Where do you get your dry cleaning done?” and when I answer “Well, at the grocery store and the dry cleaners,” they simply look confused. In fact, few can imagine living a life here.
The truth is that my Detroit — and Ron and Patty’s Detroit — might no longer be a city where dreams come true the way they once did. But this story still demonstrates some important things: how lives and businesses can thrive here, how rewarding it can be to have family close and, at the very least, how nice it is that we’re not in Florida.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Reimagining Detroit
DETROIT — Time magazine and Brookings Institution host panel discussion titled “Reimagining Detroit: Making Washington a Partner in Detroit’s Next Economy,” featuring Detroit Mayor Dave Bing and others. 4 p.m. College for Creative Studies’ Alfred Taubman Center, Argonaut Building, 460 W. Baltimore. Contact: RSVP to RSVPAssignDetroit(at)timeinc.com
In other news, a Free Press writer is calling for Michigan to memorialize Malcolm X (http://freep.com/article/20100211/OPINION02/2110561/1322/Michigan-man-Malcolm-X-deserves-a-lasting-tribute) - I quite agree, although he probably had more of an impact in other places.
Social impact of Great Recession
Some highlights to learn from:
- As a nation, we have not yet recovered from 2001 recession - incomes at 1997 levels in real terms
- National underemployment over 17%, higher for minorities, young adults, men
- Unemployment may stabilize at permanently higher rates than in the past (up to 7.5% could be "normal")
- No clear model for continued US economic growth - lost decade likely for nation
- Job deficit of 10 million; need 125 k per month just to employ new entrants
- 2000s fueled by easy growth - innovation has lagged
- "national experiment on stress"
- 20s in youth changing - post-college funemployment, less responsibilities (delayed marriage, kids)
- Those who enter workforce in a recession will permanently and arbitrarily be at salary/pay disadvantage to those who entered in a boom-time - luck, psychological effects (e.g., negative perceptions from lower initial job; tendency to hold onto jobs longer for security; most wage growth happens before 30)
- Young people too coddled - expect to put in less, get everything - everyone is "special" - entitlement rather than individualism and decision-making
- College grads crowded out by experiened professionals and newer grads without gaps on resume
- Deep psychological and physical impacts of layoffs and unemployment - laid off people will have shorter life expectancies, higher mortality rates
- Profound stresses on marriage for male unemployment - 19.4% of all men from 25-54 are unemployed - women dominated fields have been stable vs. male dominated fields
- Both men and women are happier and more satisfied when men are working
- Particular social issues for working-class communities
- Marriages among impoverished have fallen, but child-birth rates have not
- Urban blight is spreading to previously flourishing working class neighborhoods
- Racisim, intolerance likely to rise
- Many other interesting insights...
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Urban farming event today
There will be a discussion about how urban agriculture can contribute to sustainable development. This workshop is one of six planned globally, and the only one in the US. If anyone is interested in urban agriculture, it might be interesting to attend. Hantz Farms is also participating.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
RSS feeds: why and how
RSS feeds are, simply put, a way for a website/page to update YOU about changes to the page, rather than you having to check to see if something new was posted. In fact, it can even send you the full article text, or just a short blurb to pique interest. This works extremely well for blogs and is useful for wikis and other pages. I use it for this blog, macrumors.com, phdcomics.com (ya I know, but it is funny...) just to give you some examples. The underlying technology must be supported by the website (server) and you must have a client, typically an email reader or your web browser. Which you choose depends on your preferences. I use Apple Mail and choose to have my feeds come there because it is convenient to check email and check new updates at the same time. Alternatives include Firefox and Safari, etc. I'm sure Google Chrome supports and I guess Internet Explorer (avoid like the plague) does too. For those really curious, RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication. But that doesn't matter.
So as requested, a brief overview of how to get started setting up RSS feeds: For Safari, simply load the webpage you want (like this one). Then look in the text box where you type in the URL of the website you wanna go to; on the right side, you will see a little icon that says 'RSS'. Click it. For Firefox, you will see something similar, except you will see an icon that is orange, and has three arcs in it. Apparently thats the RSS icon.
Various things happen after you click, I cannot cover them all because I have no clue what combination of software you all use. Usually you will be asked to subscribe to an 'Atom' or 'RSS'. I think Atom is version 2 (newer) than standard RSS in that it can send you media files as well. I just click RSS (I like the Really Simple part). Your operating system (Mac OS X or Windows) will ask you what you want to use as your reader. I suggest your email reader, if you use one. If not, just use Firefox. I'm not sure about the details there. Many of you probably use gmail. In that case, you'll have to use reader.google.com. For blogger blogs, it should automatically link up with this blog since it is owned by Google. This behaves like a news aggregator, and isn't as good as getting it directly sent to your email reader or browser. Whichever ever reader you choose, don't worry, it will not mix up with your emails (unless I guess you want it to?).
When stuck and confused - Google for the answer. Or ask here, I may be able to help out, but no guarantees.
Finally - a word to the blog owners - basic RSS feeds are included in all blogs apparently. But this will only send the actual article out to those subscribed/followers/contributors. It will not send a comment out to an article by default. You must enable this by going into the setup options somewhere. I googled it before, so google it and you'll find out how to enable that option. For low traffic sites like this one, every post and comment is probably valuable and not much of a burden to get notification (and the actual msg).
Choose Michigan!
Maybe you can get ideas by looking at this site: http://generationymichigan.org/
Michigan Radio collected stories last fall about why young people are staying or leaving.
Monday, January 25, 2010
Midtown revitalization
Here is the link: http://detnews.com/article/20100125/METRO/1250372/Detroit-s-Midtown-district-is-a-Boom-Town
The main interesting things I learned:
- "Midtown" is made up of six neighborhoods (including Cass Corridor, Brush Park, and WSU) and was only designated in 2000 - borded by I-75 in east and south, I-94 in north, and the Lodge in the west
- In 2000, 17,000 people lived in Midtown - 3,200 new residents have moved in since
- Half of new residents are university students living in new dorms
- 1,500 housing units have been added since 2000
- Employment base is 70,000 - anchored by DMC and WSU - non automotive
- Area boasts Detroit's cultural jewels - the DIA, Wright Museum, CCS, and Detroit Science Center
- Occupancy rate is 93% due to medical and university tenants
- Much more foot traffic and stores than other parts of Detroit
- Rent in some properties is as low as 50 cents per square foot
Overall, the article compares it favorably to Troy, which isn't bad at all.
Friday, January 15, 2010
New Year, New Hope
Anyways, some good news to start the new year.
The Auto Show is showing more life this year than last, and we have had some good Congressional participation. Hopefully, the government will "get it" now that it has some skin in the game. The feds are even pitching in with money ($223 m) to raze or fix 4,000 buildings in Michigan, which would be great (http://detnews.com/article/20100115/METRO/1150375/1409/METRO/Feds-award-Michigan-$223M-to-fix-up-or-raze-4-000-buildings) - 20% of the funds will go to Detroit.
Of course, our state legislature is still in gridlock, but hopefully new indications that the people of Michigan are willing to pay more in taxes (http://detnews.com/article/20100115/POLITICS02/1150373/1022/Polls-say-Michiganians-back-higher-taxes) will sway the government to some rational decisions. As Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said, "Taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society." Frankly, we really cannot cut too much more. Government can certainly become more efficient, but cutting good programs is not an acceptable answer.
Mayor Bing and a new City Council have been sworn in - they have a lot of work to do, but I think they have as good a chance of fixing our mess as any. Even more importantly in my view, Robert Bobb has been extended with Detroit Public Schools.
Let us hope and pray that 2010 is better for Detroit and Michigan than last year and that we finally begin the long awaited Renaissance.
Monday, January 11, 2010
"Motivate Michigan"
"Motivate Michigan" Project
The Motivate Michigan project is a competition open to all students enrolled in a higher education institution in the state of Michigan. The objective is to uncover a breakthrough idea that will improve the economy in Michigan.This unique initiative is funded by corporate sponsors and all money raised will be given back to students in the form of scholarships - the scholarship goal is $100,000. The Presidents Council is among the sponsors which include Comerica Bank, Meijer, and MEDC.
The Project has been endorsed by Governor Granholm, Ken Rogers (Executive Director at Automation Alley), Beth Chappell (President & CEO, Detroit Economic Club), and others. Motivate Michigan is being presented by CIBER Inc. which is an IT services and management consulting company located in Southfield, Michigan.
Students will be able to submit their ideas to improve the Michigan economy from January 4 until March 5 at www.MotivateMichigan.org. The project is calling for students to create ideas on how to better Michigan's economy with innovative ideas and their entrepreneurial spirit. The top 10 ideas will then be posted online for the general public to vote for the best idea. The top five students will then expand their idea into a business plan and present it to a panel of judges that consists of members from our sponsors.
The winner of the competition will then have their idea undergo a feasibility test, and an implementation plan will be developed free of charge by CIBER Inc. The plan will then be presented to a leader in the state that would have ownership for the concept.