Boston Herald

Detroit thriving five years after bankruptcy

-

DETROIT — It’s been five years since Detroit bottomed out after decades of decline, admitting in the largest U.S. municipal bankruptcy filing ever that the country’s one-time industrial engine could no longer pay its bills.

The turnaround since then has been remarkable, with major investment­s that have brought new jobs, the rebirth of neighborho­ods whose best days were half a century ago and the restoratio­n of street cleaning and lighting — services so basic yet important to a sense of community. It also cost some people more than others.

Jean Estell, 65, worked about three decades in Detroit’s recreation and public works department­s before retiring in 2004. Like other retirees, she lost part of her pension and all of her retiree health coverage in the bankruptcy settlement with creditors, and she’s worried about being left behind in this new Detroit.

“I’m glad we’re doing better. I want us to do better,” Estell said of the city. “But it looks like somewhere or other they can find some money and give us our money back. At least some of it.”

Before the bankruptcy settlement, she received about $2,300 per month. Estell said she gets about $63 less per month from her pension and now has to pay for her own health care. Prescripti­on co-pays that once were $3 now are $25 for some of the roughly eight medication­s she takes, and her doctor visits cost more, too.

“I don’t go as often as I should. You get sick and you suffer through it,” she said.

Given where Detroit stood five years ago, things could be worse for the city’s roughly 670,000 residents, including current and former city workers affected by the settlement.

When state-appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr filed for Chapter 9 protection for Detroit on July 18, 2013, residentia­l streets hadn’t been swept in about three years and the city was well on its way to tearing down thousands of homes abandoned during the exodus of more than a million people that began in the 1950s.

With its tax base decimated, Detroit’s faced $14 billion in long-term debt and a $327 million budget deficit in 2013. City workers, including police and firefighte­rs, had their pay cut. Employees were forced to take unpaid days off.

Detroit emerged from bankruptcy in December 2014, having restructur­ed or wiped out $7 billion in debt. The city was forced to follow a strict spending plan and has been able to build cash surpluses while posting three consecutiv­e years of balanced budgets.

Weeks after Detroit was released from active state oversight, Moody’s Investors Service upgraded the city’s credit rating this spring — the third upgrade in less than three years.

Some parts of the city, like downtown and the Midtown cultural district, had been on the upswing before the bankruptcy filing but many broken neighborho­ods still suffered. Savings from the bankruptcy has allowed Detroit to spend more to improve quality of life. Street sweeping resumed last year, and Detroit has thousands of new street lights. Police and paramedics show up more quickly when 911 is called.

Investors are building hundreds of apartments, condominiu­ms and homes in and around the downtown area. The city, along with philanthro­pies and nonprofits, is fixing up older homes.

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? CLEANING UP: James Murphy, left, and Bryan Knoche work at Fred’s Key Shop in Midtown Detroit. Five years after Detroit filed for bankruptcy, business is booming. The city is cleaning streets and demolishin­g vacant homes, bottom left.
AP PHOTOS CLEANING UP: James Murphy, left, and Bryan Knoche work at Fred’s Key Shop in Midtown Detroit. Five years after Detroit filed for bankruptcy, business is booming. The city is cleaning streets and demolishin­g vacant homes, bottom left.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States