Montreal Gazette

Detroit may never ‘come back to the city it was’

Bankruptcy seemed inevitable: local

- SHARON COHEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Blue-collar workers poured into the cavernous auto plants of Detroit for generation­s, confident that a sturdy back and strong work ethic would bring them a house, a car and economic security. It was a place where the American dream came true.

Detroit was the affluent capital, a city with its own emblematic musical sound and a storied union movement that drew Democratic presidenti­al candidates to Cadillac Square every four years to kick off campaigns at Labor Day rallies.

The good times would not last forever. As the nation’s economy began to shift from the business of making things, that line of work met the force of foreign competitio­n. Good-paying jobs on the assembly line dried up, as factories that made the cars and supplied the steel closed their doors. The survivors of the decline, especially whites, fled the cities to pursue new dreams in the suburbs.

The “Arsenal of Democracy” that supplied the Allied victory of the Second World War and evolved into the “Motor City” fell into a six-decade downward spiral of job losses, shrinking population and a plummeting tax base. Detroit’s singular reliance on an auto industry that stumbled badly and its long history of racial strife proved a disastrous combinatio­n, and ultimately too much to overcome.

“Detroit is an extreme case of problems that have afflicted every major old industrial city in the U.S.,” said Thomas Sugrue, author of The Origins of the Urban Crisis: Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit, and a history professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

All of the nation’s industrial cities fell, but only Detroit hit bottom. Staggering under as much as $20 billion in unpaid bills, Detroit surrendere­d Thursday, filing the single largest municipal bankruptcy in American history.

“What happened in Detroit is not particular­ly distinct,” said Kevin Boyle, a history professor at Northweste­rn University who has written extensivel­y about his hometown. “Most Midwest cities had white flight and segregatio­n. But Detroit had it more intensely. Most cities had deindustri­alization. Detroit had it more intensely.”

Detroit’s first wave of prosperity came after the First World War and lasted into the early 1920s, driven by the rise of the auto industry.

More affluence followed in the late 1940s and early 1950s, as the auto industry was booming. Tens of thousands of blacks migrated from the South seeking jobs on the assembly line and a foothold in the middle class. In 1950, Detroit’s population peaked as a metropolis of more than 1.8 million, making it the nation’s fifth-largest city. The transforma­tion was dramatic.

But, by that time, Detroit’s decline had already begun.

The auto industry had started to expand beyond the city and was building plants and putting offices in suburban and rural areas, and eventually sought refuge from the city’s powerful unions in the nation’s Sunbelt states and even overseas. Between 1947 and 1963, Detroit lost 140,000 manufactur­ing jobs, said Sugrue, the Pennsylvan­ia professor.

A decade later, as Japanese auto imports started gobbling more of the U.S. market, the hemorrhagi­ng of jobs continued. Membership in the United Auto Workers topped out at 1.5 million in 1978 and stands today at about 400,000.

It wasn’t an uncommon plight: The cities that rose alongside Detroit came to be known as the Rust Belt.

Like Detroit, Pittsburgh was a community defined by its dependence on a single industry. But, as steelmakin­g crumbled under pressure from imports and the decline of the U.S. auto industry, the city’s population dropped by more than 40 per cent between 1970 and 2006.

During those years, Pittsburgh also forged a new identity around health care and technology. It retrained former steelworke­rs, invested heavily in higher education and launched a controvers­ial campaign to redevelop more than 1,000 acres of industrial brownfield­s, replacing decaying lots with luxury homes, office and retail buildings, and 27 miles of riverfront parks.

Detroit’s unravellin­g can’t be blamed solely on the city’s reliance on one industry that buckled. Some point to the city’s political leadership and its reluctance over the years to make tough decisions.

“I think it (the fiscal disas- ter) was inevitable because the politician­s in Detroit were always knocking the can forward, not confrontin­g the issues, buying off public employees by increasing their pensions,” said Daniel Okrent, a Detroit native who wrote a Time magazine cover story about the city in 2009.

“They were always kind of confrontin­g the impending crisis by trying to make it the next guy’s crisis.”

Racial strife also infected the city.

The migration of blacks into Detroit, which helped power its economic rise, was followed by an exodus of white residents for the suburbs. In the last decade alone — from 2000 to 2010 — Detroit lost about a quarter-million residents.

What’s left is a Detroit defined by a barren landscape of deserted neighbourh­oods and abandoned buildings that overwhelms the very recent rebound in parts of downtown.

For those directly affected by the collapse, watching the deteriorat­ion of Detroit in recent years has been agonizing.

“The neighbourh­ood is so different — the street lights go off, there’s more violence and gunfire, the elementary school I went to is closed and boarded up,” said Sareta Cheathem, a filmmaker and screenwrit­er who has lived in Detroit all her 42 years.

“I remember as a child winning the ‘beautiful block’ awards ... just to see the decay is something that bothers me.”

Cheathem said her 92-yearold neighbour was robbed last year, and thieves have tried to break into her home and garage.

As for the bankruptcy filing, Cheathem said that has been “gut-wrenching” and leaves her wondering “Is it going to get worse? Can it get any worse?”

Or will it signal the beginning of Detroit’s turnaround and comeback?

Boyle, the history professor, has reservatio­ns about what is actually possible in a place that’s fallen so far.

“I don’t think it’ll ever come back to the city it once was,” he said.

“The bankruptcy is not, in itself, a solution. It will presumably clear the debt. Something will have to happen for it not to repeat this pattern five or 10 years from now. Hopefully this will make life livable in this city. I think it’s doable. But I’m not sure there’s the will to do it.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Detroit is the largest city to file for bankruptcy in U.S. history. The city owes its approximat­ely 100,000 creditors as much as $20 billion.
GETTY IMAGES Detroit is the largest city to file for bankruptcy in U.S. history. The city owes its approximat­ely 100,000 creditors as much as $20 billion.

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