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Related to that article above ...
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls. May I have your attention please:
Detroit has bottomed.
I repeat:
Detroit has reached its nadir and it's all uphill from here. The evidence has now become overwhelming. You heard it here first. A sample of some of the stuff happening there.
Exhibit A: This is a long article that made the NY Times a couple weeks ago:
Testing Ground for a New Detroit$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')img]http://static01.nyt.com/images/2014/07/07/us/07detroit8/07detroit8-articleLarge.jpg[/img]
DETROIT — Inell Byrd’s house has a leaky roof.
Walls are cracked, sections of ceiling are missing and the concrete porch is buckling. Most of the furniture is gone and random belongings like Christmas lights and a bicycle are scattered about, the result of preparations for a redecoration that Ms. Byrd has not been able to manage.
The front room is bare, its only contents a low-slung futon and a large flat-screen television. With her family finances in shambles, she briefly tried to sell the house.
And beyond her walls, she worries that her street — which still has handsome colonials, Tudors and other sprawling homes — abuts one that looks bombed out.
“You got these two beautiful blocks,” said Ms. Byrd, 41, a home health aide, referring to Arden Park Boulevard in the city’s historic North End, “and everything behind you is, I ain’t going to say Beirut, but basically it just fell off.”
But there is also immense potential in this shattered urban landscape, despite more than a half-century of government mismanagement and residential and industrial flight.
Mayor Mike Duggan, who took office in January, promised immediate improvements after the city hit a low point last year, becoming America’s largest to file for bankruptcy. The North End captures both the hope and challenge of the mayor’s pledge. So tracking what happens in this neighborhood this year and next will tell a lot about whether this metropolis, with nearly 690,000 residents, can rebuild.
“The North End is an area that has real potential to come back,” the mayor said in an interview. “It’s got a proud history in this city.”
Annexed by the city in the late 19th century, the North End once was the northernmost point in Detroit, bordering on the cities of Highland Park and Hamtramck. It quickly became a haven for the upper class.
These days it still has some of the city’s most glorious homes bordering some of its harshest blight. While it counts judges, doctors and other professionals in its ranks of homeowners, its remaining residents are mostly low-income blacks who bear the brunt of Detroit’s economic decline because of a legacy of confinement to the lowest-paid, least-skilled and least-mobile jobs.
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