Sunday, November 29, 2009
Cobo plans
Here is a link to the article: http://freep.com/article/20091129/BUSINESS04/911290413/1318/Cobo-makeover?-Grand-ideas-not-so-far-fetched
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Lost chances
http://money.cnn.com/2009/11/12/news/economy/silverdome_auction/index.htm
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Temporary retailing
Here is the story: http://detnews.com/article/20091110/BIZ/911100341/1001/Temporary-shops-may-revive-retail-in-Detroit
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Safe Detroit
http://freep.com/article/20091028/BLOG36/91027082/1320/Forbes--Detroit-is-nation-s-12th-safest-city
Friday, October 16, 2009
Wayne County Tax Auction
Here is the link: http://www.waynecounty.com/mygovt/treasurer/DP_TFPAI.aspx
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Business model for land
I wonder why they don't just buy it over there? Maybe it is advantageous to avoid the property taxes if they are higher than rent...
Friday, September 25, 2009
Segway tours
We should all consider exploring...
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Time Detroit coverage
I saw an article today that has the typical points describing the decline of the city, and also hope for the future: http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1925796-1,00.html
Complete coverage of Detroit is here: http://www.time.com/time/detroit
In other news, Robert Bobb has uncovered millions in outrageous overpayment for real estate by DPS over the years: http://detnews.com/article/20090924/SCHOOLS/909240389/Audit--DPS-overpaid-millions-in-real-estate-deals
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Detroit ideas during Restaurant Week
On Monday, CNN.com posted a nice "special coverage" section highlighting Detroit, its troubles, and some positive momentum: http://money.cnn.com/news/specials/assignment_detroit/ (Tania already highlighted one section of this in her post the other day)
A couple of weeks ago, Crain's published 10 interesting ideas to help Detroit in the next decade: http://www.crainsdetroit.com/section/livingd09#
Monday, September 21, 2009
Stopping Detroit's "Brain Drain"
http://money.cnn.com/2009/09/21/news/economy/detroit_plan/index.htm
DETROIT (CNNMoney.com) -- Three years ago, with a freshly-minted law degree, Connecticut native Tom Northrop started job hunting in Detroit. While this seems like a normal step after law school, his prospective employers just didn't get it. Not many young, single, educated people were moving to Detroit. They were so surprised they wanted him to put his reasoning down on paper: He was marrying a girl from the area. Perhaps it was only to ease their sense of disbelief.
"They didn't understand people coming here who aren't from here," said his wife Lauren, also a lawyer, over dinner one night at the couple's home in the upscale suburb of Bloomfield. Basically, no one moves to Detroit unless they have family ties in the area, she said.
And more often that not, young people just move away.
Along with the exodus of auto jobs over the last few decades, Detroit has also experienced another, maybe even more alarming trend - Its young, smart people leaving for opportunities elsewhere.
Broad numbers are difficult to come by, but nearly a quarter of respondents in a survey for Fusion, the area's young professional association, said they plan on leaving Detroit within the next two years.
Among the larger population of 4.6 million people, 63,000 households left the greater Detroit area in 2007 alone, according to Internal Revenue Service numbers supplied by the Urban Studies Department at Wayne State University.
City leaders are well aware of this problem, and are working hard to fix it.
As it turns out, young people generally want the same things other people want out of a city - good jobs, safe streets, stuff to do at night, decent schools, quality healthcare, ample parks, easy public transport. Basically, they want a pleasant life.
"We can't just create new entrepreneurs and then let them leave," said Mariam Noland, president of the Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan. "We need to do all the things that are going to attract new talent and make this a desirable place to live in, or to come to. We have to make it so people want to stay."
To that end, Noland raised $100 million in grant money from various foundations, money that is now being used to build the business and cultural institutions that can bring this city back.
That's a tough prospect in an area hard hit by the dual blow of recession and auto industry bankruptcy. But Nolan, along with a host of other city leaders, see the broad outlines of a plan.
Jobs - In a metro area with unemployment running about 50% higher than the national average, putting people to work is a priority.
Many business leaders don't think the city can attract big, new auto manufacturing plants like it once did. The industry has too much capacity even now, and the competition is too tough from other states in the South.
Instead, they're pushing for Detroit to embrace the new economy. The tools are similar to ones towns use the world over - minimal bureaucracy and generous tax breaks.
But Detroit hopes to leverage its natural lead in engineering left over from its days of auto dominance into new industries like automotive electronics, software, and alternative energy.
They've had some success. Techtown, a business incubator started in 2000, boasts 98 businesses in everything from televisions to biotechnology.
Wayne County is promoting its "aerotropolis" idea - encouraging business to set up shop by the airport - taking the lead from cities like Dubai and Frankfurt that have used their airports as engines for economic growth.
Attracted by easy air transport and lots of land, General Electric recently announced plans to build a wind power R&D facility near the airport that could bring in 1200 jobs. General Motors and the battery maker A123 Systems have announced plants for advanced vehicles that together could employ 4,000 or 5,000 people - the size of a large auto plant.
The local Chamber of Commerce is in talks with foreign automakers and parts companies to set up shop in Detroit. It's also pushing a plan to make the region a global trade hub, modernizing the extensive road, rail and water links that already exist.
Downtown Detroit, which doesn't look nearly as dreary as the ring surrounding it, has attracted some new tenants as well.
The technology firm EDS relocated downtown about 5 years ago, bringing with it some 1,500 jobs. Quicken Loans is supposed to move downtown shortly, adding another 3,000 to 4,000 employees.
'It's challenging, and it's frustrating," Brian Holdwick, a 43-year old official at the Detroit Economic Growth Corporation and life-long Detroiter, said about trying to attract new industries to this city that has seen so much decline. "But to see something like the (historic) Book Cadillac Hotel come back to life, after being shuttered for 23 years, it was very important to me. It's very rewarding."
Safety - Detroit has one of the highest murder rates in the nation. There have been more killings so far this year in Detroit than in New York City, and New York has nearly 10 times as many people.
"People get jumped, cars get stolen, everyone's got a story," said Sean Blackman, a 39-year old music composer who's lived in the Detroit area his whole life. "If you move downtown, it's just part of the scene."
Like almost all Detroiters we've spoken to, Blackman loves the city and is proud to live there. But it has got to get safer if people are going to stick around, he said.
The police department has embarked on an aggressive strategy to curb the situation, including inter-agency operations that flood troubled neighborhoods with more cops.
A recent campaign put 360 additional police in a six square mile area, with a particular focus on violent crime. Officers would pay unexpected home visits to violent offenders on parole, often finding guns or other weapons in their possession. They also increased the number of traffic stops in the hope of ensnaring people involved in bigger crimes.
But in a city with a declining population and troubled businesses, finding money is hard. The police force has just 3,000 officers now, down from 4,000 ten years ago.
Culture - From Motown to movie stars, Detroit packs a deep roster when it comes to arts and entertainment. Madonna is from Detroit. As is Francis Ford Coppola, Robin Williams, and the late George C. Scott.
Cheap rents and an edgy vibe have made Detroit somewhat of a Mecca for young musicians in the garage rock and techno scenes, and a lot of people appreciate the city's gritty feel.
"The disgusting kinda looks beautiful after a while," Craig Brown, a 25-year old guitarist in the local band the Sugarcoats, said over beers one night at a barbecue joint in the city's up-and-coming Corktown district.
City leaders are also trying to promote more upscale venues. They're touting a "cultural corridor," a strip along one of the main drags in town that includes Wayne State University, the business incubator, two health centers, the symphony, the history museum, and loft-style apartment housing.
"We're trying to create a density that's attractive to young talent," said Noland, the Community Foundation president.
Connecting it all together - Detroit's redevelopment has taken place in pockets. The city is a patchwork of places. Some seem lively, full of businesses and homes. While others are the epitome of urban decay.
Parts of downtown Detroit seem to be doing well. They are relatively clean, with a nice new river walk populated with both old and new office buildings, although vacant buildings remain. One local tour operator said it's one of the safest downtowns in the country.
Development is trying to expand from downtown along the river, although the new restaurants, lofts, shops and other symbols of gentrification quickly give way to gutted homes and boarded-up store fronts.
The "cultural corridor" and the Eastern Market area - home to one of the oldest public markets in the country as well as a handful of trendy restaurants, are northwest of downtown.
The trick is to grow and connect these lively places so they spark new life in the areas they border.
To do that Detroit needs to shrink. Thanks to suburban flight of the late 20th century, it's a city of under a million people that was built to accommodate twice that many. The city needs to do something with all those empty buildings, and tie the budding neighborhoods together. There's talk of turning blighted lots into public parks, greenways, and of installing a light rail system.
"When you let it go, as Detroit did, you have cascading ripples of blight that move out from the center and keep going," said Carol Schatz, head of the Central City Association of Los Angeles who helped turn around that city's downtown in the 1990s. "But when you revitalize the downtown, it goes in the opposite direction."
The question is, will Detroit be able to get the critical mass going to get things really moving in the opposite direction?
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Lazy Journalists flock to Detroit
http://www.viceland.com/int/v16n8/htdocs/something-something-something-detroit-994.php?page=1
Reality: We need to get in the city and get it going. We need to improve the 50% literacy, the 25% graduation rate... these are fundamental responsibilities all of us share.
Monday, August 17, 2009
Detroit commercial vacancies

"Vacant buildings drain the city of potential taxes and workers who pay to park, buy lunches and shop over their lunch hours. The overall image raises further doubts in the minds of outsiders who might otherwise be interested in setting up shop in Detroit. "For downtown Detroit, it really slows down a lot of the progress that was being made," Ball said."
"While there is no official ledger of empty buildings, The Detroit News identified 48 major structures with no outward signs of life in the Central Business District, which covers about 127 blocks. Others have one or two remaining tenants. "
"Vacancies downtown are only a small part of the story: According to the U.S. Postal Service, there are 62,000 uninhabited buildings and vacant lots throughout Detroit. Entire blocks of commercial and residential property are deserted. "
Monday, August 10, 2009
What killed Detroit
Conversation with Imam El Amin about establishing a mini-park near the Muslim Center started off great and with interests, but he has not gotten back to me in several weeks about the location and next steps.
My efforts to volunteer with Mr. Bobb and the Detroit Public Schools continue to be fruitless. I have contacted his office over a dozen times now, with no response. I even went to see him two weeks ago, met him and his Chief of Staff, was told of the need for volunteer help, but I am still waiting for a phone call...
Anyways, I came across a noteworthy article the other day. The Free Press commented on an interesting piece the other day by David Frum about the fall of Detroit. It is quite insightful. Here is the piece:
By David Frum
Detroit was the Silicon Valley of the 1920s — the booming home of a glamorous new industry, a place where huge fortunes were conjured in years, sometimes months. But while the creators of the computer industry have as yet bequeathed very little to the built environment, the automobile industry piled up around it an astounding American city, in astoundingly little time.
The Detroit of 1910 was a thriving Midwestern milling and shipping entrepot, a bigger Minneapolis. The Detroit of 1930 had rebuilt itself as a grand metropolis of skyscrapers, mansions, movie palaces and frame cottages spreading northward beyond the line of sight, exceeding Philadelphia and St. Louis, rivaling Chicago and New York.
I had a chance to tour central Detroit recently, my first visit to the downtown core in many, many years.
Some of the old visual magnificence remains, has even been improved.
But for the most part, all is decay. Whole towers stand empty, waiting to join the long line of grand structures that have either been abandoned to pillage and ruin, like Detroit’s once magnificent neoclassical skyscraper of a train station, or else pulled down entirely, like the downtown Dayton Hudson department store, once the largest enclosed shopping space in the United States.
Detroit’s fall was as steep and rapid as its rise.
In 1960 it remained a thriving city, showing early signs of future trouble yes, but still strong, rich, and proud. By 1970, Detroit was a byword for urban dystopia.
Detroit Then and Now, by Cheri Gay, compiles a series of photographs to illustrate the change. The book in one way is a disappointment: it’s written in a tone of forced boosterism that requires the author to deny the reality of the collapse she’s chronicling. Detroit was vibrant then, and it remains vibrant now, she wishes to argue… like Sarah Palin’s career, it’s just advancing in a different direction.
This mode of argument will convince nobody. But sustaining it does require the author to avert her glance from those sections of the city where the theme of evolution cannot possibly be sustained: the acres of abandoned houses, the vacant lots where commercial enterprises once stood.
But here is one thing that I do learn from the book: Detroit has never been protective of its past. In the prosperous early 1960s, it used federal urban renewal funds to pull down its grand Romanesque 19th century city hall. (Detroit wants to use today’s TARP money to repeat its vandalism, this time on the old train station.)
Detroit sacrificed a handsome row of pre-Civil War mansions built by then-leading citizens to allow the Detroit News to erect a bland new office and printing block. It has erased almost all traces of its pre-automobile past from the downtown, and only lack of demolition funds preserved its oldest surviving downtown neighborhood, now faintly recovering as a yuppie-gay historical enclave.
Not all the urban renewal schemes failed. I was dazzled by a Mies van der Rohe townhome project, a human-scale garden streetscape in the middle of the city, so lovely that you could almost forgive the grim adjoining Mies van der Rohe high-rise apartment projects.
More often, however, urban renewal was to Detroit what the RAF was to Dresden. One heart-rending contrast: the General Motors plant in Hamtramck, where acres of solid working-class housing were bulldozed — not to make way for the factory itself, which required relatively little space, but so that the factory could be surrounded by parking lots, grass and a wide moat of highway from the rest of the city. It makes a heart-rending contrast to the abandoned 1920s Packard factory I visited, where cottages had been built literally across the lane from the factory wall: literally 40 feet away.
What killed Detroit?
The collapse of the automobile industry seems the obvious answer. But is it a sufficient answer? The departure of meatpacking did not kill Chicago. Pittsburgh has staggered forward from the demise of steelmaking. New York has lost one industry after another: shipping, garment-manufacture, printing, and how many more?
Two other factors have to be considered.
The first is the especially and maybe uniquely poisonous quality of Detroit’s race relations. Like Chicago, Detroit attracted hundreds of thousands of black migrants between 1915 and 1960, mostly very unskilled, hoping to gain well-paying employment in factories and warehouses.Their arrival jeopardized the ambitions of the white working class to raise its wages through unionization. Henry Ford eagerly hired black workers in order to defeat the unions, and in the violent labor clashes of the 1930s, whites and blacks often confronted each other as strikers and strikebreakers.
After the war, the United Autoworkers union tried to integrate blacks into the industrial workforce. But by then automation had begun, and industry’s demand for unskilled labor would first cease to grow, then diminish, then disappear. For many migrants, the promised land soon proved a mirage. Or maybe worse than a mirage. If the promised land did not yield the hoped-for industrial jobs, it offered something else: generous new welfare programs, the ashy false fruit of urban liberalism. The children of the parents who accepted the fruit grew into the criminals who drove first the middle class and then the working class out of the downtown and then altogether out of the city.
As the white working class departed, Detroit became a black-majority city, governed by a deeply aggrieved and flagrantly corrupt political class. Political dysfunction spiraled the city into another cycle of dissolution and abandonment — and the abandonment in turn provided the politicians with fresh grievances.
The second factor in Detroit’s decline is the city’s defiant rejection of education and the arts. Pittsburgh has Carnegie-Mellon. Cleveland has Case Western Reserve University. Chicago has the University of Chicago, Northwestern, and a campus of the University of Illinois. Detroit has… Wayne State.
A city that celebrated industrial culture spurned high culture. The Detroit Institute of Arts is very nice. But it does not begin to compare to Cleveland’s museum, let alone the Art Institute of Chicago.
Detroit has a symphony orchestra, but its history has been troubled and unstoried in comparison to Philadelphia’s or Cleveland’s. On the plaza in front of the Detroit municipal building is a huge bronze replica of Joe Louis’ fist and arm, as if to say: “Here is a city ruled by brawn.” Brawn counts for very little in the modern world. The earnest redevelopers who hoped to renew Detroit by razing its history instead destroyed the raw materials out of which urban renaissance has come to so so many other American downtowns.
A couple of days after I returned from Detroit, I telephoned a friend who had lived and worked in the city for many years. My friend, it’s relevant to mention, is the son of an Irish cop, ardently Catholic and defiantly conservative. Why did Chicago recover and Detroit fail, I asked. What doomed the city? He thought for a moment. “Not enough gays.”
Detroit confirms the lessons taught by Jane Jacobs and Russell Kirk. Preservation is as vital to urban health as renovation. Indeed, they are inseparable. The preservation of the old incubates the new.
It’s a lesson with application not only to Detroit’s past, but its future. The great factory complexes along the Detroit River have shuttered. America no longer manufactures here. Some will want to rip the factories down. Leave them be — leave them for now as monuments and memorials of the achievements of the past; leave them for the future, when somebody will want them.
Want them for what? Who can say? Who in 1950 could ever have imagined London’s Docklands converted into condominiums? Who would have guessed that New York’s emptied toolshops would provide some of the city’s most coveted office space? The 22nd century will put the artifacts of the 20th to equally unsurmisable uses, if only we permit it. Cities can molder for a century or more, and then reawaken to a new era that rediscovers something of value in the detritus of an earlier time. Brooklyn did. So did Miami Beach. Ditto Boston and Charleston — and even more spectacularly, Dublin and Prague.
The promise of renaissance may yet come true, even for the ghost city of Detroit.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Auto Industry => Solar Power Industry?
Check it out: Stirling engine solar dish farms also seek to restart Detroit
Also, Stirling engines aren't new, but they're being used in more innovative ways recently: Dean Kamen's company, DEKA, developed smaller Stirling engines to serve as the power source for another device designed to purify water. It was tested in Bangladesh to check the efficacy of removing arsenic and organics (ie toxins) from the water sources they have there. The fuel for the engine? Farm animal waste...
Michigan Central Station
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Schools and parks
In the meantime, I still have not heard back from Mr. Bobb about my offer to volunteer and help his effforts to fix the Detroit Public Schools. I followed up with a phone call to his office last week, and his assistant told me his chief of staff still hadn't looked at resumes and offers to help...I think that is a bit outrageous, but sadly, it isn't the worst I've seen in terms of volunteer management.
Alas, more bad news out of the Detroit schools today - today's Free Press reports that the district may have to declare bankruptcy (that isn't even the worst news - a number of students were shot this afternoon waiting for a bus!). Here are some highlights from the article:
"Calling the Detroit Public Schools budget the worst he's ever seen, the state-appointed emergency financial manager said Monday that he is considering other measures -- including filing for bankruptcy."
" "I cannot balance the budget," Robert Bobb told the audience of less than 100 people at a public hearing at Cass Technical High School. "I never thought I'd hear myself say that.""
"DPS will enter the next school year with a deficit of about $259 million, down from the projected $430 million, Bobb said."
On a brighter note, I am a bit closer to piloting my idea to turn abandoned plots into mini-parks. Imam El Amin liked the idea, and we've identified a small lot owned by the city near the Muslim Center that we could convert. I'll keep you posted.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Lack of Retailers in Detroit
http://finance.yahoo.com/family-home/article/107206/retailers-head-for-exits-in-detroit.html?mod=family-autos
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Returning to Nature? Not a bad idea!!!
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/financialcrisis/5516536/US-cities-may-have-to-be-bulldozed-in-order-to-survive.html
Monday, June 1, 2009
Goodbye, GM (by Michael Moore)
by Michael Moore
June 1, 2009
I write this on the morning of the end of the once-mighty General
Motors. By high noon, the President of the United States will have
made it official: General Motors, as we know it, has been totaled.
As I sit here in GM's birthplace, Flint, Michigan, I am surrounded by
friends and family who are filled with anxiety about what will happen
to them and to the town. Forty percent of the homes and businesses in
the city have been abandoned. Imagine what it would be like if you
lived in a city where almost every other house is empty. What would be
your state of mind?
It is with sad irony that the company which invented "planned
obsolescence" -- the decision to build cars that would fall apart
after a few years so that the customer would then have to buy a new
one -- has now made itself obsolete. It refused to build automobiles
that the public wanted, cars that got great gas mileage, were as safe
as they could be, and were exceedingly comfortable to drive. Oh --
and that wouldn't start falling apart after two years. GM stubbornly
fought environmental and safety regulations. Its executives arrogantly
ignored the "inferior" Japanese and German cars, cars which would
become the gold standard for automobile buyers. And it was hell-bent
on punishing its unionized workforce, lopping off thousands of workers
for no good reason other than to "improve" the short-term bottom line
of the corporation. Beginning in the 1980s, when GM was posting record
profits, it moved countless jobs to Mexico and elsewhere, thus
destroying the lives of tens of thousands of hard-working Americans.
The glaring stupidity of this policy was that, when they eliminated
the income of so many middle class families, who did they think was
going to be able to afford to buy their cars? History will record this
blunder in the same way it now writes about the French building the
Maginot Line or how the Romans cluelessly poisoned their own water
system with lethal lead in its pipes.
So here we are at the deathbed of General Motors. The company's body
not yet cold, and I find myself filled with -- dare I say it -- joy.
It is not the joy of revenge against a corporation that ruined my
hometown and brought misery, divorce, alcoholism, homelessness,
physical and mental debilitation, and drug addiction to the people I
grew up with. Nor do I, obviously, claim any joy in knowing that
21,000 more GM workers will be told that they, too, are without a job.
But you and I and the rest of America now own a car company! I know, I
know -- who on earth wants to run a car company? Who among us wants
$50 billion of our tax dollars thrown down the rat hole of still
trying to save GM? Let's be clear about this: The only way to save GM
is to kill GM. Saving our precious industrial infrastructure, though,
is another matter and must be a top priority. If we allow the shutting
down and tearing down of our auto plants, we will sorely wish we still
had them when we realize that those factories could have built the
alternative energy systems we now desperately need. And when we
realize that the best way to transport ourselves is on light rail and
bullet trains and cleaner buses, how will we do this if we've allowed
our industrial capacity and its skilled workforce to disappear?
Thus, as GM is "reorganized" by the federal government and the
bankruptcy court, here is the plan I am asking President Obama to
implement for the good of the workers, the GM communities, and the
nation as a whole. Twenty years ago when I made "Roger & Me," I tried
to warn people about what was ahead for General Motors. Had the power
structure and the punditocracy listened, maybe much of this could have
been avoided. Based on my track record, I request an honest and
sincere consideration of the following suggestions:
1. Just as President Roosevelt did after the attack on Pearl Harbor,
the President must tell the nation that we are at war and we must
immediately convert our auto factories to factories that build mass
transit vehicles and alternative energy devices. Within months in
Flint in 1942, GM halted all car production and immediately used the
assembly lines to build planes, tanks and machine guns. The conversion
took no time at all. Everyone pitched in. The fascists were defeated.
We are now in a different kind of war -- a war that we have conducted
against the ecosystem and has been conducted by our very own corporate
leaders. This current war has two fronts. One is headquartered in
Detroit. The products built in the factories of GM, Ford and Chrysler
are some of the greatest weapons of mass destruction responsible for
global warming and the melting of our polar icecaps. The things we
call "cars" may have been fun to drive, but they are like a million
daggers into the heart of Mother Nature. To continue to build them
would only lead to the ruin of our species and much of the planet.
The other front in this war is being waged by the oil companies
against you and me. They are committed to fleecing us whenever they
can, and they have been reckless stewards of the finite amount of oil
that is located under the surface of the earth. They know they are
sucking it bone dry. And like the lumber tycoons of the early 20th
century who didn't give a damn about future generations as they tore
down every forest they could get their hands on, these oil barons are
not telling the public what they know to be true -- that there are
only a few more decades of useable oil on this planet. And as the end
days of oil approach us, get ready for some very desperate people
willing to kill and be killed just to get their hands on a gallon can
of gasoline.
President Obama, now that he has taken control of GM, needs to convert
the factories to new and needed uses immediately.
2. Don't put another $30 billion into the coffers of GM to build cars.
Instead, use that money to keep the current workforce -- and most of
those who have been laid off -- employed so that they can build the
new modes of 21st century transportation. Let them start the
conversion work now.
3. Announce that we will have bullet trains criss-crossing this
country in the next five years. Japan is celebrating the 45th
anniversary of its first bullet train this year. Now they have dozens
of them. Average speed: 165 mph. Average time a train is late: under
30 seconds. They have had these high speed trains for nearly five
decades -- and we don't even have one! The fact that the technology
already exists for us to go from New York to L.A. in 17 hours by
train, and that we haven't used it, is criminal. Let's hire the
unemployed to build the new high speed lines all over the country.
Chicago to Detroit in less than two hours. Miami to DC in under 7
hours. Denver to Dallas in five and a half. This can be done and done
now.
4. Initiate a program to put light rail mass transit lines in all our
large and medium-sized cities. Build those trains in the GM factories.
And hire local people everywhere to install and run this system.
5. For people in rural areas not served by the train lines, have the
GM plants produce energy efficient clean buses.
6. For the time being, have some factories build hybrid or
all-electric cars (and batteries). It will take a few years for people
to get used to the new ways to transport ourselves, so if we're going
to have automobiles, let's have kinder, gentler ones. We can be
building these next month (do not believe anyone who tells you it will
take years to retool the factories -- that simply isn't true).
7. Transform some of the empty GM factories to facilities that build
windmills, solar panels and other means of alternate forms of energy.
We need tens of millions of solar panels right now. And there is an
eager and skilled workforce who can build them.
8. Provide tax incentives for those who travel by hybrid car or bus or
train. Also, credits for those who convert their home to alternative
energy.
9. To help pay for this, impose a two-dollar tax on every gallon of
gasoline. This will get people to switch to more energy saving cars or
to use the new rail lines and rail cars the former autoworkers have
built for them.
Well, that's a start. Please, please, please don't save GM so that a
smaller version of it will simply do nothing more than build Chevys or
Cadillacs. This is not a long-term solution. Don't throw bad money
into a company whose tailpipe is malfunctioning, causing a strange
odor to fill the car.
100 years ago this year, the founders of General Motors convinced the
world to give up their horses and saddles and buggy whips to try a new
form of transportation. Now it is time for us to say goodbye to the
internal combustion engine. It seemed to serve us well for so long. We
enjoyed the car hops at the A&W. We made out in the front -- and the
back -- seat. We watched movies on large outdoor screens, went to the
races at NASCAR tracks across the country, and saw the Pacific Ocean
for the first time through the window down Hwy. 1. And now it's over.
It's a new day and a new century. The President -- and the UAW -- must
seize this moment and create a big batch of lemonade from this very
sour and sad lemon.
Yesterday, the last surviving person from the Titanic disaster passed
away. She escaped certain death that night and went on to live another
97 years.
So can we survive our own Titanic in all the Flint Michigans of this
country. 60% of GM is ours. I think we can do a better job.
Yours,
Michael Moore
MMFlint@aol.com
http://www.michaelmoore.com/
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Microtechnology Forum
Background (i.e. why did we put this together?):
We (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor) have a newly renovated and expanded research lab open to external users (ie, the industry at large) who pay a modest hourly rate for use of equipment. A local (Kalamazoo-based) healthcare company is probably the biggest (in terms of $$$ spent) user of this lab currently, though the Lurie Nanofabrication Lab has over ~30 different companies partaking in the facilities offered.
Ann Arbor is an enclave of highly-educated individuals - the draw is the university itself. But we're extremely deficient at converting that talent and expertise to new businesses that can hire people - a key, I believe, in getting the trickle down effect to build up the local economy. That is beginning to change. A friend started up a high-technology business a few years back, got a nice tax cut from MEDC (Michigan Economic Development Corporation) to open up offices in downtown Detroit. Today, he's no longer there - he had to move R&D to Ann Arbor (easy access to local talent/brains), and headquarters to Cali. He will tell you, with sadness, that he had to do it because his company couldn't raise money locally. The money is available, its just not here, but in Silicon Valley and California in general. The Cali VCs required him to be local to them and so that obviously meant his company had to split, and Detroit's appeal disappeared.