Will You Have a Role in Detroits Future? The Next 5 Years Mike - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Will You Have a Role in Detroits Future? The Next 5 Years Mike - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Will You Have a Role in Detroits Future? The Next 5 Years Mike Duggan Mayor, City of Detroit May 30, 2019 Detroit Population: 1900 to 2010 Population of Detroit 2,000 1,600 Thousands 1,200 800 400 0 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940


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Will You Have a Role in Detroit’s Future? The Next 5 Years

Mike Duggan Mayor, City of Detroit May 30, 2019

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Detroit Population: 1900 to 2010

400 800 1,200 1,600 2,000 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Thousands

Population of Detroit

Source: US Census Bureau

Detroit grew to the 4th largest city in the U.S. in 1950 and has shrunk to the 23rd largest today

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Half of the City’s streetlights were out

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1/3 of the City buses broken down in DDOT Garages

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Cars frozen in the streets…

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…from 100s of water main breaks

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40,000 Abandoned houses defined a blight-ridden city

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The plan for Detroit’s recovery had 3 distinct steps

  • 1. Dramatically improve City services and finances to stop the exodus of people and

businesses

  • 2. Remake the physical appearance of the City by removing blight, recreating beautiful

parks and building modern streetscapes

  • 3. Identify Detroit’s competitive advantages and use them aggressively to attract residents

and businesses All of this gets much easier if the financial burden of car insurance is removed from Detroit residents

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Thank you to Governor Whitmer, Majority Leader Shirkey, Speaker Chatfield… and Dan Gilbert for finally getting No Fault reform passed

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Step 1: Before we could start on a strategic plan, we had to prove we could deliver basic City services

We added repair crews, fixing water main breaks immediately

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We put 80 new buses on the roads and added 2,000 new trips a week

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Installed 65,000 new streetlights in less than 3 years

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We’re now delivering balanced budgets year-after-year

($133) ($146) $71 $143 $169 $131 ($200) ($150) ($100) ($50) $0 $50 $100 $150 $200 FY 2013 FY 2014 FY 2015 FY 2016 FY 2017 FY 2018

Amount ($ in Millions)

Unassigned Fund Balance (Deficit)

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Step 2: Blight removal in Detroit had failed for decades because it lacked a systematic plan

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Contractor demolition capacity is 3,000-4000 houses a year – That meant it would take 10-12 years to remove them all

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We made the hard decision to concentrate demolition, prioritizing 5 strong neighborhoods in April, 2014

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In late 2014, expanded zones to neighborhoods 90% occupied

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As property values climbed in neighborhoods with demolitions, we

  • pened a website auctioning the solid houses
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2015: Expanded to neighborhoods 80% occupied

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2016: Demolition zones expanded to 70% occupied

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Using $265 million in Federal funds, we have demolished 18,000 abandoned houses in last 5 years

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People responded to targeted demolitions by moving back: 6,000 vacant houses are now rehabbed and occupied

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The sales prices in neighborhoods we targeted jumped 50% in 2 years

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18625 Monica

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2700 Rosa Parks

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3275 Collingwood

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What do those early targeted neighborhoods look today?

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Livernois McNichols

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Southwest Detroit

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Corktown

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North Rosedale Park

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Jefferson Chalmers

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Campau Banglatown

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Our obligation now is to every Detroiter we haven’t reached We still have 18,000 more abandoned houses left

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The next step: Take down every abandoned house in Detroit in next 5 Years, without Federal funds

Every area of Detroit will be blight-free by the end of 2024

  • March 2020:

Ask voters to support blight removal bond issue of $200+ million

  • Will require no tax increase
  • Will support renovation of houses that can be saved
  • Supplemented with other sources of funds

Will allow demolition of 4,000 houses/year from 2020-2024, fully removing blight from City of Detroit

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In 5 years, this sight will not exist in any neighborhood in Detroit

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Rebuilding the Parks: Every Detroit child should be able to walk or bike to First Class park in 10 minutes

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We’re on track – we’ve already rebuilt 53 parks and will be upgrading 60 more in next 5 years

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Center of Fitzgerald Neighborhood was full of abandoned houses and vacant lots

39

BE BEFO FORE RE

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AF AFTE TER

Today the new Ella Fitzgerald Park is a community gathering place of beauty

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Hackett Park in 2016

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Hackett Park Today

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Stewart Park in 2015

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Stewart Park now

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Luce – St. Louis Park: Before

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Luce – St. Louis Park: After

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Phelps Park: Before

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Phelps Park: After

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Jayne Park in Campau/Banglatown had become an underused baseball complex

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Now it’s being converted to baseball, soccer, cricket, putt-putt golf, and splash pad

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Rebuilding Riverside Park in Southwest

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Abandoned Rogell Golf Course closed in 2013

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…Is being converted to a wetland/nature park

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Neighborhood commercial corridors are harder to bring back: They require private business investment

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So we started in 2016 with Invest Detroit and Philanthropic Partners with Strategic Neighborhood Fund:

West Village

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This vacant former B. Siegel site on Livernois

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Is now being rebuilt as a new restaurant and housing

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The City has started tearing out the old Livernois median

  • B. Siegel

Development Livernois Streetscape

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And is now building a streetscape that will look this…

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This stretch of Kercheval had been long abandoned

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But now, a vibrant commercial district is coming back

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An abandoned NBD Branch…

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…is now retail stores and apartments

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As one vacant storefront after another…

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…reopens in this rapidly growing neighborhood

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As the City remakes this Kercheval streetscape

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Into this

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On Bagley in SW Detroit, we’re turning this...

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…into this

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All of these plans are a shared vision of those in the neighborhood, forged through dozens of community meetings

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We wanted to expand to developing 10 neighborhood corridors, but we couldn’t do it without major financial help

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SNF launched with strong support from philanthropy

Kellogg Foundation Ford Foundation Skillman Foundation Hudson Webber Rockefeller Foundation Wilson Foundation Kresge Foundation JP Morgan Chase Foundation CDFI Fund JPB – Miami Knight Foundation

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Gary Torgow, Steve Steinhour, and Dan Loepp led a 7 company $35 million commitment – Will leverage another $100+ million in private investment

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Why did these corporate leaders do this? History shows short term subsidy leads to long-term success

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Sandro Dinello and Flagstar Bank have partnered with the Old Redford neighborhood

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To take this stretch of Lahser…

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…to develop like this

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And this area of Grand River at Lahser…

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…to look like this

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The Penske Corporation partnered with Jefferson Chalmers

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To help activate this recreation center

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And help turn this stretch of Jefferson…

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…into this

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David Dauch and American Axle committed to Campau/Banglatown

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To turn this stretch of Conant…

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…into this

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And this area outside Davison School…

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…into this

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The plan for Detroit’s recovery had 3 distinct steps

  • 1. Dramatically improve City services and finances to stop the exodus of people and

businesses

  • 2. Remake the physical appearance of the City by removing blight, recreating beautiful

parks and building modern streetscapes

  • 3. Identify Detroit’s competitive advantages and use them aggressively to attract residents

and businesses

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As we rebuilt the City physically, we took stock of Detroit’s strategic position

In Midwest

Chicago Cleveland Pittsburgh

  • St. Louis

Milwaukee

In Michigan

Southfield Royal Oak Farmington Canton Sterling Heights

To Grow, We Had to Compete for Residents and Businesses

What Are Detroit’s Advantages?

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Detroit’s recovery strategy is taking advantage of 5 unique assets

  • 1. We have huge amount of vacant land and buildings
  • You can locate business or home at low cost
  • 2. Talented and creative Millennials want urban lifestyle
  • 3. Detroit’s unemployment rate is double state and national average
  • A large workforce of people able and willing to work
  • 4. We are building a spectacular Riverfront
  • 5. American auto industry is located here
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We went after the companies depending on Millennial recruitment with great success

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We landed bank headquarters

3/2016 Fifth Third Bank Opened HQ -300 Jobs

4/20/16 Ally Bank Moved into HQ 1,400 Jobs Chemical Bank New HQ 500 Jobs 3/2016 Fifth Third Bank Opened HQ 300 Jobs

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Could we turn Detroit’s unemployment rate into a competitive advantage recruiting manufacturing companies?

March, 2019 City Unemployment Rates

Southeast Michigan National Cities Detroit 8.8% Detroit 8.8% Ann Arbor 2.5% Chicago 3.7% Canton 2.1% Huntsville 3.5% Novi 2.4% Nashville 2.5% Rochester Hills 2.9% Spartanburg 3.5%

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We intentionally targeted companies with jobs that would train those with high school degrees: Wolverine Packing = 100+ new jobs

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And this Cardinal Health plant with 150 jobs

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The breakthrough came when we landed this new Flex-N-Gate auto parts plant in the I-94 Industrial Park for 700 jobs

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And 16,000 people showed up to apply

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The I-94 Industrial Park has started filling up

Flex-N-Gate 700 Jobs Linc Logistics 150 Jobs ArcelorMittal 100 Jobs

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Sakthi Automotive brought a parts plant to the old Southwestern High School

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Employing 600 workers in 3 expansions in 3 years

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Then Ford decided to rebuild the abandoned train station as its Center of New Technology Development

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Anchoring a $750 million campus housing 5,000 new employees

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Crain’s Detroit Business: April 23, 2019

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The number of employed Detroiters grew 25,000 in the last 5 years

Total Employment

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Detroit’s ultimate challenge: Land FCA Assembly Plant

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Experts called that goal “Impossible”

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We proposed attempting to acquire 200 adjacent acres

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The Key: Detroit offered the services of the City’s rapidly expanding employment agency: Detroit At Work

  • Detroit has 20,000 active unemployed
  • Another 40,000 adults who have dropped out of the

work force – many due to criminal records

  • We made FCA an offer: Let us do your recruiting for you
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We committed to holding continual job fairs to fill openings

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Now expanding from 3 Career Centers to 8

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FCA is required by contract to interview candidates from Detroit At Work first More than 20,000 have already provided text numbers to request applications

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  • Assessment Prep
  • Interview Skills
  • Application Assistance
  • Identification/Document Assistance
  • Soft Skills and Conflict Resolution
  • Work Readiness Training Program

Detroit At Work will offer the following prescreening services to each Detroit FCA applicant

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Would you like Detroit At Work to be your employment agency?

  • We are looking now for pilot partners with 4 criteria:
  • Company located in Detroit or will be opening in Detroit
  • Has full time jobs with benefits
  • Will commit to ”Ban the Box” in employment
  • Will sign an FCA-type agreement committing to interviewing Detroiters first before
  • ffering jobs to others

To learn about becoming a Pilot Partner go to DetroitAtWork.com

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