by Tanada » Fri 04 Jan 2013, 19:52:38
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Newfie', 'I') sure don't want to get into this Blue/Red argument but I have to wonder, is there some larger lesson to be learned here?
I'm not so much interested in WHY it failed but HOW it went down? Don't care much for blame, how do we deal with the reality?
I expect many of our cities to fail in the future. It would be interesting and informative to know more about what the trip down the sewer was like for those living there.
Any insights?
I grew up in the shadow of Detroit, in the 1970's and early 1980's a lot of manufacturing jobs moved south and west to Texas and California. There were whole neighborhoods you could drive through, block after block and perfectly sound abandoned houses. Now you can drive through those same neighborhoods but only one house in 20 is owner occupied, the rest are tumbled down, derelict, burnt out or occupied by people you really don't want to spend time with. When I was a kid int he 1970's you could still go to downtown Detroit and shop at Hudson's world headquarters, it caught fire about 20 years ago and was demolished to build the new stadiums for the Tigers and Lions along with a bunch of other buildings. Late in the 1990's or early 0's Hudson's was bought out by Macy's. Detroit had the oldest Thanksgiving Day parade in the country, sponsored by Hudson's. When I was growing up we would watch the two competing parades, Hudson's in Detroit and Macy's in NYC.
Starting in the late 1970's there was the People Mover project, it was supposed to be an elevated transit system based on the D.C. Metrorail system except for being elevated everywhere instead of subway style. The corruption on the project was so bad that it took almost 20 years to get the base loop around downtown completed and none, zip-zero-nada of the connector legs ever got built to link all of the suburbs back together. From the 1920's to the late 1950's there was a transit rail linking Toledo, Ohio with Novi, a northern suburb of Detroit, it was bought out by automotive interests who wanted less competition and much of the right of way was resold to Detroit Edison which built high tension lines in the right of way and new powerplants in the 1960's and 1970's between Toledo and Detroit to feed power into the grid down that power line right of way. It became harder to get to Detroit because when they built the freeway system they meant it for trucks and if you drive it, it shows. Michigan allows heavier trucks than almost any state in the Union and as a result the roads grow potholes quicker than you would believe as soon as the first flaw appears. Corruption was again a major problem, some of the feeder routes like I-275 and I-75 have been rebuilt three times since 1985, and I mean rebuilt as in they dig everything out and layer in new gravel, new rebar and pour new cement then cap it with asphalt. The parts they did three times were substandard and didn't last for beans, maybe they finally got it right.
As people moved out of the city proper into the suburbs out out to thew southwest in pursuit of jobs the tax base collapsed. Instead of retrenching and retooling to fit within the budget the city instead raised taxes on those who remained, which meant everyone who could afford to move was motivated to do so. For a very long time the city has not plowed snow off of the neighborhood streets unless it was a deep fall all at once, and if it was it would take them two or three weeks to get it cleaned up. Meanwhile you would get stories about elderly people without power or heat because repair crews couldn't get into some locations until snow removal was done.
Gosh writing about this brings back a lot of depressing memories, in the big blizzard of 1978 there were people stranded who froze to death, though probably only a score or so, not the thousands people think of these days when you call a weather event a disaster.
Well that is the way I remember the decline and decay of Detroit, others may remember it differently. I never lived there, but we were always 'in the shadow' because if you wanted to go to a cultural event or a major league sporting event or the annual auto show you had to go to Detroit to do it. They had a great zoo and a great museum of fine art back in the day, but the zoo as I understand it has fallen on hard times and nobody seems to care about art anymore. The whole of Belle Isle was park like with a smaller zoo and lots of activities for kids but now even that is bankrupt.