Showing posts with label PA 72. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PA 72. Show all posts

Monday, December 3, 2012

Michigan Town Woos Hollywood, but Ends Up With a Bit Part

 By

PONTIAC, Mich. — Even the great and powerful Oz could not save the film studio that was supposed to save this town. 

The studio, a state-of-the-art facility fit for Hollywood blockbusters, had risen from the ruins of a General Motors complex here. It was the brainchild of a small group of investors with big plans: the studio would attract prestigious filmmakers, and the movie productions would create jobs and pump money into the local economy. A glamorous sheen would rub off on this down-on-its-luck town....
 
Pontiac desperately needed them. In March of that year, roughly one of every two residents was without work, according to federal data. Food pantries had record requests. Pontiac was consistently listed among the top 10 most dangerous cities by the F.B.I. The city had made national news when a group of teenagers approached homeless people on the street and beat them to death. 

Ms. Granholm declared the city in a financial crisis in February 2009 and appointed an emergency manager, Fred Leeb. The city’s budget was $54 million a year, but it was overspending by an estimated $7 million to $12 million. Pontiac was also still weighted down by old incentives it had given to businesses like G.M. 

The movie studio was an added challenge, since it was seeking financial incentives from the city — not to mention from other branches of the government. It won redevelopment tax credits from the federal government and separate aid from the state that included incentives for technology companies that hire residents. 

Job creation became a point of contention with beleaguered Pontiac, which was being asked to waive virtually all property taxes for the studio. The investors claimed that thousands of people would be employed, but Mr. Leeb said that when he asked for job numbers to be written into the contract, the investors refused. “We started seeing some backpedaling,” said Mr. Leeb, who added that the negotiations featured “knock-down, drag-out fights.” 

Mr. Nelson said he did not recall that request, but added that his company could not have guaranteed jobs anyway, since they were mainly supposed to be created by filmmakers renting out the studio.
Under pressure from the governor’s office, Mr. Leeb said he had little choice but to approve the investors’ requests....
 

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/04/us/when-hollywood-comes-to-town.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Manufacturing and metros are recipe for success, says guru on cities | Bridge Michigan

Manufacturing and metros are recipe for success, says guru on cities | Bridge Michigan

  20 November 2012
Manufacturing and metros are recipe for success, says guru on cities
By Derek Melot/Bridge Magazine

Bruce Katz has pushed a consistent message for Michigan: M&M&E.
That’s short for manufacturing, metros and exports. A vice president at the Brookings Institution, Katz has worked in recent years with Business Leaders for Michigan in developing ideas for improving Michigan’s economy.

Bridge Magazine spoke with Katz by phone recently to get his sense of how Michigan’s recovery is doing – and what policy decisions are still lacking to bolster the state’s economy.

Bridge: In your testimony before the House Commerce Committee in May, you noted that Detroit and Grand Rapids ranked highly for export intensity. What is export intensity and why is it important in economic policy considerations?

A: Export intensity is a measure of the share of total output in the metropolitan area that is exported. Nationally, exports are around 11 percent of total gross domestic product, but in strong manufacturing metros, it’s higher. Detroit is about 14.9 percent and in Grand Rapids, it’s 15.3 percent. So there is just greater export intensity in the manufacturing metros and what we found is that 13-14 metros in Michigan are actually more exporting intense than the U.S. economy as a whole.

You know that matters because you know global demand is raising the U.S. economy, which has been underperforming because we have such a large domestic market. So with the Great Recession, the recovery that we have had to date is still not sufficient. What we have had today has mostly been fueled by global demands, particularly in countries like China, Brazil and elsewhere. … As the century unfolds, we are going to find ourselves doing more business abroad and for cities and metropolitan areas, they are going need to understand what they trade and who they trade with.

Bridge: Is it fair to say, based on these export intensity figures, that Michigan is actually further along than the rest of the country?

A: What it shows is that you are a production powerhouse, both in the large metros and smaller metros. For a long time, we have treated manufacturing differently with the old economy; actually manufacturing is completely fueled by technology innovation. … There is a future for manufacturing in the United States for a lot of different reasons and those places that are manufacturing hubs obviously have a jump on everyone else. The question is whether they understand it and are doing what is necessary to continue to move forward.

Bridge: In 10 to 20 years, how big a share will manufacturing carry in the economy and how many jobs will it provide?

A: Well these are the numbers I think are important to start the conversation: Manufacturing in the United States is 9 percent of jobs; it’s about 11 percent of GDP and employs about 30 percent of all engineers in the country. It accounts for about 68 percent of all private research and development and it generates 90 percent of the patents in the United States.

I just came from a tech-economy conference in Detroit, which is a conference on technology innovation. A large portion of the conference was about manufacturing and, again, I think we had almost a cartoon conversation about manufacturing where we talked about the old economy is manufacturing and the new economy is Facebook. This is a completely absurd conversation.
Manufacturing is still very productive in the United States. We are the third largest exporter in the world behind China and Germany and that is without any policy at the national scale that frankly is even remotely coherent.

 Bruce J. Katz is a vice president at the Brookings Institution and founding director of the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program which aims to provide decision makers in the public, corporate and civic sectors with policy ideas for improving the health and prosperity of cities and metropolitan areas.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

State and municipal bankruptcies are the financial crisis around the corner - News-Sentinel.com

State and municipal bankruptcies are the financial crisis around the corner - News-Sentinel.com

Tuesday, November 13, 2012 - 12:01 am
"Worse still, beginning in 2014 state and local governments will be required to report their pension obligations like businesses currently must. This means that sometime in the next fiscal year the debt that is several times greater than that which is currently on the books will magically appear on balance sheets. Among the worst examples will be Illinois, where reported government liabilities will rise from a few thousand dollars per resident to as much as $100,000 per citizen. No government without the ability to print money can pay this amount, and this will generate a crisis that will test the republic.
On its face, the problems should be easy to fix. Government employees in many places have been made promises that cannot be kept. These are mostly about pension benefits such as compensation, retirement age and health care costs. In the most solvent places, such as Indiana, this will mean modest benefit cuts to teachers and public employees. It will also mean higher tax rates than we would otherwise have enjoyed. In Chicago, New York and Los Angeles it will mean fiscal chaos that is outside of modern memory. This will lead to calls for federal interventions, which must be largely resisted."

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Mini Debate Between Fred Leeb and the Attorney for the Opposition



Debate Over Proposal #1 
The Emergency Manager Law  
Spotlight on the News-Channel 7 WXYZ

MiniDebateonProp1(EM Law) and5 on 10-28-12
Please Click on the Picture Above to See the Debate Video

Proposal #1, the Michigan Emergency Manager Referendum, is on the ballot in Michigan for the November 6th election.  If the referendum passes (by voting "Yes", Public Act 4 (which was passed by the Michigan legislature in 2011 as the Local Government and School District Fiscal Accountability Act) will be adopted but if the proposal is defeated (by voting "No"), the law will not take effect. 

I strongly recommend that you vote YES on Proposal #1.

A mini-debate on Proposal #1 was held and aired Sunday, October 28, 2012 on WXYZ Channel 7's Spotlight on the News program hosted by Chuck Stokes.  The participants were Herb Sanders, attorney for Stand Up for Democracy (the coalition that sought to place the referendum on the ballot) and me (the former Emergency Financial Manager of the City of Pontiac).  The video of this debate can be seen by clicking on the picture above.  [The portion related to Proposition #1 is from the beginning of the clip until 13:16, sorry about the initial advertisement.]
I believe that there are many reasons to vote yes on Proposal #1, as follows:
  • The law has been used very rarely and only when it has been absolutely necessary to try to save a local governmental unit from a financial disaster.  I do not believe the State has any desire to take over the responsibility for managing many governmental entities.  There are currently only 5 cities (Flint, Pontiac, Ecorse, Benton Harbor and Allen Park) out of about 2,900 local governmental units in Michigan and 3 school districts (Muskegon Heights, Detroit and Highland Park) out of 579 school districts that have an Emergency Financial Manager.  In addition, there are three cities working with a consent agreement (Detroit, River Rouge and Inkster).

  • If the law is defeated, it is likely to cause additional lengthy delays in the process of helping cities to get back on track financially as the parties argue about what should be done instead.  The biggest loser is likely to be the City of Detroit because it already has "hit the wall" and is only able to operate with the State providing managerial assistance and financial resources.  On December 21, 2011, Andy Dillon, the State Treasurer, said that Detroit had total liabilities estimated at more than $12 billion and that the deficits in the General Fund  have fluctuated between over $155 million and over $300 million each year from 2005 through 2011.  Total General Fund debt and other liability proceeds have been over $600 million for 2005 through 2010.

  • Under Public Act 4, the local governmental entity has many opportunities to avoid the need for an Emergency Manager, even after what may be decades of poor financial management.   There also are a number of checks and balances.  First, the State has to conduct a preliminary review of the level of financial stress.  Second, if necessary, there must be a more formal review including representatives or nominees from the State Treasurer, the State House, the State Senate, the State budget office and others appointed by the Governor.  Third, there is an opportunity for a consent agreement for continuing operations.  There also is the potential for a recovery plan in which additional powers can be granted to the local officials to help them in their efforts to correct the situation.  Fourth, if the Governor decides an Emergency Manager is necessary, the local unit can request a hearing.  Fifth and finally. the local governmental unit can appeal the decision to the Ingham County Court.

  • Public Act 4 requires communication and disclosure of the Emergency Manager's decisions to the State and to the public.  For example, the Emergency Manager must have a financial plan in 45 days and conduct a public information meeting.  The Emergency Manager also must report all details of expenditures, hiring, transactions, etc. every three months.  In addition, the Emergency Manager may retain a local inspector or auditor (from an approved list provided by the State Treasurer) to oversee and report on the local governmental unit.

  • Property tax revenues will not increase significantly and help local governments for many years even if the economy experiences an economic boom.  Michigan's Proposal A already limits increases in property taxes per year to the lesser of 5% or the rate of inflation (which has been recently at only 2-3%/year).

  • Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy (one of the alternatives) has been used very rarely by local governmental units anywhere in the country.  Its provisions are very different from Chapter 7 or Chapter 11 bankruptcy.  Chapter 9 generally leaves the local administration in place running the local governmental unit without a trustee and without court oversight.  It is unclear to me how any major operating changes would be considered or implemented.  Even if there was a plan approved by the bankruptcy court to reduce the local government's liabilities, it is likely that new deficits would continue to be generated since the underlying operating structure and processes wouldn't necessarily change.  Chapter 9 is a debt adjustment plan without a reorganization function.  A couple of the cities in California, however, have used it primarily to reject collective bargaining agreements quickly and to significantly reduce or try to eliminate retiree healthcare.
 
I strongly believe it is time to get past arguing about who is in charge and get into developing and implementing good ideas for sorely needed major changes.  There are many other cities that already have had great success for years in working to improve their communities.  We should spend our time examining places like New York City (with one-eighth the murders per capita of Detroit), Colorado Springs, Turin, Italy, downtown Las Vegas, Atlantic City and many others.  Let's get on with making Detroit's turnaround a huge success.   

[Please note that, contrary to current TV ads from Stand Up for Democracy regarding Prop #1, I have never been a partner of the person who bought the Silverdome.  Two years after the sale I did begin to supply limited consulting services to him to help improve the property to try to again encourage business growth in Pontiac.]  
 


http://myemail.constantcontact.com/Interesting-Mini-Debate-Between-Fred-Leeb-and-the-Attorney-for-the-Opposition.html?soid=1101086242761&aid=cp3gkeA8YVU

Friday, October 26, 2012

Campaign 2012: Meet the Candidates, Audio On Demand « CBS Detroit

Audio On Demand « CBS Detroit

Recorded Live, Talk Radio 1270 WXYT afternoon host Doc Thompson and WWJ Tech Editor Matt Roush hosted this special election forum at Lawrence Technological University. Those in attendance had a chance to ask local candidates questions and learn more about the six statewide ballot proposals.

I participated in a very interesting discussion in presenting the case in support of Proposal #1, the Emergency Manager Law. Please vote Yes on this proposal in the November 6th election.  My comments start at about 5:20 into the audio recording.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Rolling the Dice with Taxpayer Money

Rolling the Dice with Taxpayer Money


The recent bankruptcy filing by A123 Systems, a maker of batteries for electric and hybrid cars, once again shines a spotlight on the use of government subsidies to aid individual companies. In A123's case, it was the federal government that awarded the company nearly $250 million in stimulus money, but states don't exactly have an admirable track record when it comes to this issue.

Massachusetts loaned money--$5 million--to A123, but that's just the tip of the states-as-venture-capitalist iceberg. State investments in private companies generally come in two forms. The first is grants or loan guarantees, such as the $75 million that Rhode Island taxpayers lost when the state invested in former star pitcher Curt Schilling's failed video-game company, 38 Studios. The other is tax breaks and other tax incentives. Massachusetts provided a combination of grants and tax breaks that added up to more than $30 million for Evergreen Solar, a clean-energy company that declared bankruptcy last year.

Either way, it's a bad deal for taxpayers. States aren't very good at venture capitalism because it's a skill very few public officials have. For them to roll the dice on a specific company is like me joining a high-stakes Las Vegas poker game. The difference is that I'd lose my own money in Vegas. When states play venture capitalist, they play with taxpayer money.

States don't do much better when they use tax breaks to try to lure specific companies. In the wake of the Evergreen fiasco, Massachusetts officials formed a Tax Expenditure Commission to review the Bay State's web of tax breaks, also known as "tax expenditures."

The commission pegged overall foregone state revenue from tax breaks (not just those for businesses and economic development) at an estimated $26 billion this year, more than the total amount of tax revenue the commonwealth expects to collect during the fiscal year. And a 2011 analysis by the state auditor of 91 business tax breaks offered that year found that only a few came with mechanisms for reviewing their effectiveness or recovering lost revenue if the breaks failed to produce the hoped-for economic benefits.

In addition to being ill-suited to investing in individual companies, states also shouldn't subsidize specific industries, as with the federal oil-industry subsidies that, along with investments in companies like A123, have become an issue in the presidential campaign. What state governments can do is create opportunities by funding research through public universities or other outlets. Companies can then compete to put the fruits of that research to the most lucrative use.

A123 reminds us that the federal government isn't so good at picking winners and losers. But the evidence is clear that states are no better. Both taxpayers and state revenues would be best-served if state officials realize their limitations, focus on creating an environment of economic opportunity and let the market sort out the details.

******************************************
Fred Leeb: I agree that it makes a lot more sense for government to support research rather than trying to pick a specific business or individual company to subsidize to guarantee its success.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

A Manhattan Project for Failing Cities

A Manhattan Project for Failing Cities
Posted by Ryan Holeywell, October 2, 2012
Governing

In the 1940s, the military launched an audacious effort to unlock some of science’s greatest secrets as part of a push to develop nuclear weapons. Thousands of scientists -- drawn by a combination of patriotism and the desire to work with some of the greatest minds in their field -- banded together to join the cause.

Eventually that effort, known as the Manhattan Project, developed the atomic weapons that played a critical role in ending World War II. But the knowledge developed through the project, as well as the network of laboratories established to conduct the research, remains part of the project’s legacy today.

Fred Leeb says it’s time for the government to consider a Manhattan Project for America's failing cities.

Lately, Leeb has been making his case for an initiative he calls "Think BIG" (the BIG is for business, innovation and growth) to anyone who will listen. After all, he knows more than just about anyone about the devastation facing some American cities and the seemingly insurmountable challenge of bringing them back from the brink.

In 2009 and 2010, Leeb served as the first emergency financial manager of Pontiac, Mich., a city in such dire financial shape that it was essentially taken over by the state, which then gave Leeb and his successors wide-ranging powers to enact reforms.

Leeb, like most of the state’s emergency financial managers, was popular with neither voters nor elected officials. That’s no surprise, given his task of closing a budget deficit that, at the time, measured either $7.1 million (according to the city) or $12 million (according to the state).

Cutting deficits means cutting costs, and Leeb eventually left Pontiac under less-than-sanguine circumstances. Today, Pontiac is still facing challenges. The city was projected to end the FY 2012 fiscal year with an $8.4 million deficit, according a recent report by Leeb's successor.

While working on Pontiac, Leeb was confronted by a problem facing just about anyone trying to fix a broken city: You can't cut your way to prosperity.

Pontiac, a boomtown in the first half of the 20th century, saw its population decline along with the auto industry. In 1970, it had 85,000 residents, but it's down to 60,000 today. Now, more than a third of residents live in poverty, including almost half of all children. Its unemployment rate is the second worst among Michigan cities, topping 25 percent.

Pontiac, like just about every other financially distressed city, faces a conundrum that seems almost impossible to address. When businesses leave town, so do residents. Both those losses mean less revenue for a city, which translates into cost-cutting. But a city that’s pulling back on services only drives more people away and has an even greater challenge recruiting new businesses and residents.“ To have a strategy where you cut and cut and cut, it only means more cuts are necessary later," Leeb says.

Eventually, cities enter a sort of death spiral, and the only residents who remain are the ones who are too poor to move out. “People live there because they don’t have the means to go anywhere else,” Leeb says. “Everybody else has voted with their feet.”

It’s a spiral that Leeb says cities often can’t solve, even when they turn to drastic steps. His solution: Think BIG.

Leeb wants to see a program, similar to the Manhattan Project or NASA in which the federal government would give a few billion dollars to the country's top minds in order to collaborate on a monumental project. But, in a twist, they'd have to live and work in one of America's struggling cities.

Maybe they’d develop a new form of low-cost housing. Maybe they’d tap into a new source of renewable energy. Whatever they worked on, it would start with hiring some of the top-ranking officials from the country’s preeminent high-tech companies and then giving them the authority to hire hundreds of bright employees. “They’d want to come because they’ll be with their best and brightest peers working on a challenge that will change the country,” Leeb says.

The project would create a solution that would serve a broad, national interest. But just as importantly, their mere presence in the distressed city could help turn it around by giving a tax base to the city as well as customer base to new businesses who would want to be near such a large cluster of smart, creative people.

“You can’t attract one person at a time,” Leeb says. “You have to have a way of bringing a group together, all at once.” Leeb says his idea was developed by conversations with his own son, a recent college graduate, who said he wouldn’t consider looking for a job in Detroit. When Leeb asked if he’d participate in a project like the one he outlined -- even if it meant less money -- his son said absolutely.

It's an idea worth considering. In Michigan alone, the state has given itself authority over seven cities facing significant financial problems. Since 2010, there have been seven cities and localities nationwide that have filed for bankruptcy.

At a time when the federal government is pulling back on spending, an idea like Leeb’s could face serious challenges. But he says even a few billion dollars would be a bargain if it would save an American city. “Spending a couple billion on Detroit? That’s a drop in the bucket compared to what’s already being spent to get nowhere,” Leeb says.

Leeb says that his idea is more likely to succeed than a stimulus program. While a stimulus program can give work to existing residents, it’s not going to do anything to convince new people to move to a city. In Pontiac, for example, millions of dollars spent on road projects would be unlikely to help the city get new residents or new businesses.

The other traditional idea of economic development embraced by cities -- throw tax credits at retailers in hopes that they’ll build a store within your jurisdiction -- isn’t going to fix a place like Pontiac or Detroit either. Businesses are savvy, and incentives aren’t going to convince them to build a store in a place with an eroding customer base.

Essentially, Leeb argues, a struggling city like Pontiac or Detroit needs a lot of new residents at once in order to get momentum heading in the right direction. Traditional models of economic development are ill-equipped to address that need. “There has to be a way of bringing people with means and intelligence and creativity,” Leeb says.

In Detroit, there’s already some evidence that something like Leeb’s vision could work. In 2010, Michigan businessman Dan Gilbert brought the offices of his company, Quicken Loans, from the suburbs to downtown Detroit. Since then, a total of 10,000 new workers are now operating in downtown Detroit, including 6,000 from his businesses and 3,000 with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, according to the Detroit Free Press. Many of them are reportedly renting apartments and buying condos downtown.

Last year, New York City announced that Cornell University and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, a school in Israel, won city land and $100 million for infrastructure improvements in order to build a high-tech engineering campus on Roosevelt Island. The hope is that the campus spins off companies that become economic drivers in the city, helping the city diversify its economy that is largely driven by financial services.

Leeb believes Detroit -- with its combination of urban blight, high unemployment and an abundance of open space -- could be the perfect case study for his Think BIG idea. “The economy is not doing poorly because of a lack of money,” Leeb continues. “The economy is doing poorly because we don’t have the creativity and the education and the investments in people that we had previously."




GOVERNING Logo
Ryan Holeywell is a staff writer at GOVERNING.
E-mail: rholeywell@governing.com

Comments



Shane Phillips    |    Commented 13 Days Ago
This idea definitely has appeal, and is reminiscent of what Zappos' CEO Tony Hsieh is trying to do in downtown Las Vegas, but I think the first question we need to answer is which cities are worth saving. In an ideal world the answer is of course: all of them. In the real world, however, if there's going to be a Manhattan project for cities, or even many of them, this is a decision that needs to be made and could have far-reaching and long-term consequences. Does a place like Pontiac, a city that's never been more than a small-to-medium-sized city, the type of place we want to dedicate these resources, both in intellect and in money? I guess another way of saying this is does a city like Pontiac have the "bones" to really become a Great American City? Or is the goal simply rejuvenation but not greatness?
Bill Brooks    |    Commented 12 Days Ago
Quicken owner Dan Gilbert is doing just this kind of "BIG" thinking in his Detroit project, as the catalyst for a massive, creative, forward thinking renaissance project in some of its most blighted areas. Already home to thousands of new, "creative class" citizens, his projects are turning Detroit around. AND he is giving back to the community, providing spaces for the cultural arts organizations that are key to attracting the kind of employees these new start ups seek in their live, work, play environments. And he is doing it with private money!
Rich    |    Commented 11 Days Ago
So he'll probably be arrested for making progress. 
Mike Teague    |    Commented 12 Days Ago
After reading this article, one should ask, “Is Leeb really watching the developments in the world around him?” Big government has sucked the life blood out of many US cities, as well as a number of Euro Zone countries. And Leeb's solution....More government intervention via more social engineering, paid for by the taxpayer. Yet Leeb offers a solution to a problem he doesn’t even bother to define the root cause of. Essentially, did Pontiac fail "in spite of the efforts of government" or "because of them"? Michigan as a whole is a glowing example of failed policy and big government meddling. The question that Leeb and others should be asking is....What is the correct role for government to play in our lives, and should government be allowed to continue to meddle in virtually every aspect of American life? When that answer is identified, and the correct scope of government is established, only then will effective policy making and planning be possible. Additionally, Leeb fails to recognize that right to work and low/ no sales tax states continue to see business and population growth even in the current stagnant economy. Could it possibly be that where government regulation, meddling, and taxes are low, business and society thrives, and where the contrary is true, business and society suffers? The answers to the 'real' problems aren't that complicated. It’s just that Leeb, and others like him, are simply unwilling to recognize the complete failure of 40 years of bad policy and overreach by government as the root causes of what we’re seeing today. “Government is not the solution to our problems. Government is the problem”…Ronald Reagan. “The era of big government is over”… Bill Clinton. Two presidents, representing two parties, with two very different approaches to government, yet coming to the same conclusion. They were both right. Yet individuals like Leeb simply refuse to listen.
Fred Leeb    |    Commented 8 Days Ago
I think that you missed that I was the Emergency Financial Manager in Pontiac. I was appointed to the position because the local officials were suing each other while the city was going off the financial cliff. I saw first hand how the city had been terribly mismanaged by the elected officials for decades and how it wasted the proceeds of the "good old days" when General Motors was the major employer paying tremendous amounts in taxes every year. When I arrived the city had a growing deficit and about $100 million in debt with no financial or strategic plan, aside from relying on the county or state government to enable more debt. There was plenty of blame to go around. There now are many cities where a huge amount has been spent in infrastructure but the population is undereducated, housing is poor (the average price of a house in the city proper of Detroit is about $20,000),city services have been cut and will continue to be cut due to declining taxes and there is at least 25% unemployment. Detroit is in an excellent strategic location but many people with means (prior to Dan Gilbert's efforts) voted with their feet to leave the city for the suburbs or other parts of the country. As a result, there are now about 80,000 blighted houses in Detroit that must be demolished (that alone would cost about $800 million). It is almost impossible for a city in this condition to compete for one new educated tax-paying resident at a time against the myriad of other cities with much more to offer. 
Rich    |    Commented 11 Days Ago
"Could it possibly be that where government regulation, meddling, and taxes are low, business and society thrives, and where the contrary is true, business and society suffers?" Sorry, but no. It is well-known that ppl always prefer government control of their lives so they don't have think and can just be 'entitled' to stuff.
Fred Leeb    |    Commented 8 Days Ago
I am not advocating another pork barrel project where the government will essentially throw money from a helicopter and hope that 10% of it will be used properly. I am advocating a project where a group of the best and the brightest in the country will be challenged to attract and work with their peers. The goal will be to develop something innovative (e.g., a new form of energy that will not need subsidies) that will generate a reasonable return on investment and, just as importantly, bring a new critical mass of people who are educated and demand high-quality services to the city (i.e., new taxpayers). I believe that people who already have proven themselves to be the best in business, science, technology, etc. will jump at the chance to be the leaders of this effort. They will choose the remainder of the core group. I also visualize that, as was the case with NASA or the Manhattan Project, the government had very little say in the day-to-day operations. They let the project leaders decide how to approach and manage the strategies and the issues. The government will have to get out of the way. I agree that if government becomes a significant decision-maker in how the project unfolds, it is likely to be a huge disaster. If the project starts off with the right people, however, they will be motivated primarily by their drive for success and to team with their peers on a project that could change the country in multiple dimensions. In my opinion, Americans seem to do best when they are challenged, not when they are subsidized. I still believe that there are many high-achievers who would love to have a once in a lifetime opportunity to impact the country, even if they already have succeeded elsewhere. 
Rich    |    Commented 11 Days Ago
Way too much 'thinking' here. The Manhattan Project dealt with the hard realities of hard science. *This idea deals with the unknown realities of NO science. So, here's a simple, immediate solution: Stop thinking and start paying. Just announce 'we have a billion $$ and we're going to split it up tax-free among everybody who moves into "Your Town Here" in the next 6 months and stays 5 years.'
Fred Leeb    |    Commented 8 Days Ago
Cities like Detroit already have waited 40-50 years for a resurgence but the population has continued to fall precipitously. Most recently, Dan Gilbert has made a huge difference by bringing about 10,000 direct and indirect employees to the downtown area. But, how many times can he do this and how long will these people stay when public schools are terrible, crime is high, police forces are being cut again and the street lights don't work? This seems to me to be an area where government could invest in people and projects with long-run returns and multiple byproduct benefits. This would be a tremendous improvement over spending much more money on "shovel-ready" projects that create few lasting benefits or returns. I think people would be very surprised at how many dollars are already going into cities like Detroit from federal, state, county and municipal coffers as well as nonprofits (for health benefits, unemployment insurance, food subsidies, housing, roads, prisons, law enforcement, etc.). Do we want to keep that expensive and failing status quo or do we want to recognize our failures and do something about it? 
JTB    |    Commented 7 Days Ago
The Manhatten Project for Cities that your writing of is already underway in Oregon. Oregon's State government embraced a fiscally responsible and progressive Land Use policy which stood directly against sprawl and the "endless" expansion model of continual duplication of infrastructure. Basically, the State mandated Urban Growth Boundaries around every city in the State and it has had the intended effects of a.) curbing sprawl, b.)redirecting investment back into cities and c.) protecting valuable farm and forest lands. Take a trip to Portland and you will see a city that rivals any city in the World. Oregon's "secret weapon" is the containment of sprawl and refocusing of investment back into urban areas. Oregon has not had to provide finance(taxes)for each new water, sewer, highway, and school system everytime some developer decides to buy a farm and build a bunch of houses. The State used its regulatory powers (not tax dollars) to induce developers to rebuild, retrofit, increase density or reuse land in the urban cores that already had infrastructure. The increased urban population densities have created positive feed back loops because they support the florishing businesses which in turn pay taxes and make the area more attractive to more people. Young people are flocking there because of its high quality of life, modern urban amenities, progressive politics and proximity to expansive natural areas that have not been paved over with the homogenous big box retail centers. The Oregon model is the right answer for state government land use control b/c it encourages the private sector to reinvest in cities and allows the government to maintain existing infrastructure and expanding it when necessary. By asking cities to grow thoughtfully and follow land use plans, the state has maintained its cities and controlled infrastructure costs while providing a high quality of life to citizens.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Innovation Delivery Teams Tackle Cities' Problems Through Bloomberg Philanthropies Grants

Innovation Delivery Teams Tackle Cities' Problems Through Bloomberg Philanthropies Grants
The Bridgespan Group, October 15, 2012

Overcoming common barriers to innovation

America’s largest cities face increasing demands from their constituents, even as their resources diminish. Given the prevailing social, demographic, economic, and environmental trends, these challenges are unlikely to abate any time soon. While state and federal governments use policy to effect change, city governments are on the front lines, directly responsible for executing change efforts. Ultimately, many of society’s problems, from handgun violence to homelessness and climate change, will be solved—or not—in our cities.
But innovation is a tremendous challenge, due to three particular barriers: silos that prevent collaboration on cross-cutting issues; limited funding for new initiatives; and the blend of talent in government itself, with longstanding civil servants working alongside relatively short-lived political administrators. The last challenge is particularly cumbersome, and can exacerbate the others. Civil servants have few incentives to rally for change, and more incentive to wait out the current administration to minimize offending longstanding constituencies and relationships. Because change efforts are typically a risk until there is a positive effect to show for them, it’s not surprising that civil servants are slow to embrace the flavor of the month coming from the mayor’s office, when history has shown that they may just be asked to undo it when the next mayor arrives.
To spur change, the Innovation Delivery Team Initiative funds a group of people who sit outside of all municipal departments and report directly to the mayor. These teams look across agencies and functions of government in their cities to address critical priorities. The Initiative borrows from successful models used around the world, including Sir Michael Barber’s approach to change in the United Kingdom, which championed a relentless focus on results. The Initiative also incorporates lessons from New York City, Malaysia, Maryland, Louisiana, and other areas. The result? A detailed “playbook” with tactical advice on how teams can generate solutions and deliver results.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Fate of emergency manager law now up to voters | City of Detroit | Detroit Free Press | freep.com

Fate of emergency manager law now up to voters | City of Detroit | Detroit Free Press | freep.com

 "Eventually, there comes a point where the city is going to go over the cliff, and something has to be done," said Fred Leeb, a financial consultant based in Oakland County who was the emergency manager of Pontiac in 2009-10 under Public Act 72. "You can't go on spending more money than you take in ... using smoke and mirrors to pretend the problem will go away."

Monday, September 24, 2012

Local governments cut costs via efficiency; steps include computers that shut themselves off - The Washington Post

Local governments cut costs via efficiency; steps include computers that shut themselves off - The Washington Post

By Associated Press, Published: September 24

"Around the country, governments big and small are embracing cooperation, consolidation and efficiency to wring a few more dollars out of the budget as the effects of the Great Recession linger....
During the worst of the downturn, many local governments resorted to layoffs and other blunt means of cutting spending. Now, with the economy still shaky, they are looking in less obvious places for ways to save money."

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Fiscal stress continues for hundreds of Michigan jurisdictions, but conditions trend in positive direction overall (mpps-fiscal-health-2012.pdf (application/pdf Object))

mpps-fiscal-health-2012.pdf (application/pdf Object)

The Center for Local, State, and Urban Policy
Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, University of Michigan
Michigan Public Policy Survey September 2012

"For the first time since the MPPS began in 2009, fewer than half of local leaders expect their jurisdiction will be less able to meet its fiscal needs next year, as compared to this year. This may reflect a “new normal,” based on cuts in services and staffing that have been made by local governments over the last few years, thereby allowing them to get by with fewer resources.

Still, the overall improvement masks ongoing fiscal distress for hundreds of jurisdictions, for which the worst may be yet to come.  Further, even for those jurisdictions that may have turned the corner toward better times, other factors on the horizon could send them back on a negative path. In recent months, for instance, the U.S. economy appears to have been slowing once again, and should this continue or worsen, it could be expected that local governments would quickly experience negative effects.

In addition, state policymakers in Lansing are expected to re-start efforts to reform the Personal Property Tax, another significant source of funding for local governments. Any significant cuts in revenue from this source could also potentially threaten the nascent improvement in fiscal health for local governments statewide.

While conditions appear to be improving overall, there is no doubt this is still a challenging time for local government in Michigan."

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Support For Emergency Manager Law - AM 1590 WTVB The Voice of Branch County

Support For Emergency Manager Law - AM 1590 WTVB The Voice of Branch County


News

Support For Emergency Manager Law

Saturday, August 25, 2012 6:54 a.m. EDT
Filling out a survey
Filling out a survey
(DETROIT) - A new survey shows that Michigan voters support the state's emergency manager law. According to a survey conducted by Detroit television station WDIV and the Detroit News, 53% of Michigan voters support keeping the law while just 33% do not.  The emergency manager law, Public Act 4, allows Governor Rick Snyder the ability to intervene with financially strapped cities and appoint an emergency manager with the power to break collective bargaining agreements, fire elected officials and privatize or sell public assets.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Taming the OPEB Beast

Taming the OPEB Beast

Originally posted by Charles Chieppo on 8/8/12

In "California's Neglected Promise," author Adam Tatum estimates that the besieged Golden State is facing more than $62 billion in unfunded liabilities for "other post-employment benefits" (OPEB), which mostly consist of health-care costs for retired public workers.

California's OPEB burden is just a small part of the picture. In 2004, the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) announced that beginning in 2008 cities and states would be required to calculate and make public their OPEB liabilities. Now, one estimate puts unfunded state and local OPEB liabilities at more than $2 trillion, while a survey of 126 state and local pension plans (representing 85 percent of public-pension assets) found unfunded pension liabilities of roughly $700 billion — and that was two years ago.

While many of us would like to change the way public pensions work, those systems do deduct money from current employee salaries to fund at least a portion of future costs. OPEB expenses, on the other hand, are generally funded on a pay-as-you-go basis from operating budgets.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Capitol Weekly: City bankruptcies target retirees' health costs

Capitol Weekly: City bankruptcies target retirees' health costs

City bankruptcies target retirees' health costs

The cost of retiree health care promised state and local government employees, growing at a faster pace than more-publicized public pensions, has become a common target for cuts in a string of California city bankruptcies.

San Bernardino, which filed for bankruptcy last week, lists a $2.2 million savings from a deferred retiree health payment in a three-month fiscal emergency plan said to be needed to allow the city to make payroll.

In a lengthy bankruptcy that began in May 2008 and ended last November, Vallejo cut monthly retiree health care payments to $300 from as much as $1,500, saving an estimated $100 million over time.

Stockton, in a June bankruptcy, would end all retiree health care payments, citing overly generous and costly benefits: immediate eligibility, uncapped payments, less than half of retirees covered, and a cost equal to 31 percent of payroll for proper pre-funding.

Unlike pensions, there is no widely held view that promised retiree health care is a “vested right,” protected by contract law, under a long series of court decisions. Some think promised retiree health care can be cut, depending on circumstances.

NY state officials eye automatic control boards | Reuters

NY state officials eye automatic control boards | Reuters
By Joan Gralla

The latest discussion of control boards in New York follows a report last week by DiNapoli that noted eight municipalities were so close to hitting the maximum level of property tax allowed by the state that they were at risk of losing state aid.

The concepts that policy makers now are analyzing would sidestep the political process by devising a list of fiscal indicators, according to the source, who requested anonymity. If a municipality was in the danger zone on a minimum number of them, an advisory board might be created, or the localities' finances might be handed over to a control board.

Tests might include whether the fund balance was in deficit, whether reserves had been exhausted, or whether the municipality had exceeded the maximum property tax level.
Some policy makers are concerned that automatically creating a control board to run a localities' finances would give the state too much power, the source said.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Pontiac awarded $25,000 judgment after Silverdome lawsuit - theoaklandpress.com

Wallace Parker painted himself as Pontiac's hero saying he would buy the Silverdome for close to $20 million. The truth has now come out. It is a sad story.

*******************

Pontiac awarded $25,000 judgment after Silverdome lawsuit


By DUSTIN BLITCHOK
dustin.blitchok@oakpress.com; Twitter: http://bit.ly/LGMFSH”>@SincerelyDustin

PONTIAC — A $25,000 judgment owed to the city of Pontiac has been entered by Oakland County Circuit Judge James Alexander against attorney H. Wallace Parker’s company, Silver Stallion Development Corp.

Parker sought to buy the Pontiac Silverdome from the city in 2008, but the deal was never closed. Then-Emergency Manager Fred Leeb auctioned the stadium in 2009 for $583,000 to Canadian developer Andreas Apostolopoulos.

The day the stadium went to auction, Nov. 19, 2009, Silver Stallion filed suit against Leeb, the city of Pontiac, then-Mayor Clarence Phillips and auction firm Williams & Williams Marketing, Inc. Parker wanted an injunction halting the sale of the Silverdome and claimed racial discrimination as a factor in why the stadium was not sold to his company. He said the auctioning of the stadium amounted to a breach of contract relating to Silver Stallion’s purchase agreement signed with the city.



Pontiac awarded $25,000 judgment after Silverdome lawsuit - theoaklandpress.com

Monday, June 4, 2012

All Hail the Generalist - Vikram Mansharamani - Harvard Business Review

All Hail the Generalist - Vikram Mansharamani - Harvard Business Review

All Hail the Generalist

We have become a society of specialists. Business thinkers point to "domain expertise" as an enduring source of advantage in today's competitive environment. The logic is straightforward: learn more about your function, acquire "expert" status, and you'll go further in your career.

But what if this approach is no longer valid? Corporations around the world have come to value expertise, and in so doing, have created a collection of individuals studying bark. There are many who have deeply studied its nooks, grooves, coloration, and texture. Few have developed the understanding that the bark is merely the outermost layer of a tree. Fewer still understand the tree is embedded in a forest....

For various reasons, though, the specialist era is waning. The future may belong to the generalist. Why's that? To begin, our highly interconnected and global economy means that seemingly unrelated developments can affect each other. Consider the Miami condo market, which has rebounded quite nicely since 2008 on the back of strong demand from Latin American buyers. But perhaps a slowdown in China, which can take away the "bid" for certain industrial commodities, might adversely affect many of the Latin American extraction-based companies, countries, and economies. How many real estate professionals in Miami are closely watching Chinese economic developments?