Why Detroit Matters

Mayoral candidates are making neighborhood restoration the centerpiece of their campaigns
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Illustration by Michael Hirshon

During the campaign for mayor, you鈥檒l hear both candidates talking about the importance of fixing neighborhoods. Much of the discussion focuses on what many perceive to be a disproportionate share of resources going to downtown redevelopment, while residents see continued disinvestment and decline in their neighborhoods.

Obviously, prioritizing citizens鈥 everyday needs is critical if the city is to stop the decades-long population drain. The payoff for current residents is clear. But is there a payoff for the suburbs, too?

Detroit and its suburbs have long had a contentious relationship. It鈥檚 worth noting, however, that many suburbanites have significant roots in the city. Chances are, if you鈥檙e more than one generation deep in southeast Michigan, your parents or grandparents lived here. Families were raised, memories created.

How many of us have waxed nostalgic while driving past the home where our formative moments took place? But what happens when the neighborhood you knew is a shell of its former self? What happens when the elementary school you went to is boarded up or the stores you visited or the playgrounds you played on aren鈥檛 there anymore?

Good memories are often replaced with emptiness, sadness, apathy, or even animosity.

How do those feelings affect how we think about the city? Had we done a better job of taking care of neighborhoods, might we think differently about how 鈥 and whether 鈥 to help the city recover?

It seems critical to stop the decline and repair the neighborhoods we can 鈥 and swiftly 鈥 lest another generation lose their fondness for the city.

So what鈥檚 the plan? Wayne County Sheriff Benny Napoleon and ex-Detroit Medical Center CEO Mike Duggan are both making neighborhood restoration a centerpiece of their campaigns. I talked to both candidates, and both say the keys to reversing the city鈥檚 decline are crime prevention and blight reduction.

MIKE DUGGAN:

鈥淭he first thing鈥夆︹塱s dramatically cut down on police response time,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e continue to have a large number of sworn police officers sitting in offices dispatching cars鈥夆︹塵ore than 50 officers filling out payroll instead of being on the street. We need to take every job that could be done by a civilian at half the price鈥夆︹塧nd get our officers on the street responding to calls. And when they are on the street, we鈥檝e got to give them the resources they need.

鈥淚 hear over and over from officers that they arrest somebody [then] go to type the arrest report on the computer in the car, and the computer鈥檚 not working,鈥 he says. Instead of being able to drop off the prisoner and get back on the street, officers have to go in to the precinct and type up reports.

鈥淭here are so many operational things that could be done right now that could cut police response time,鈥 Duggan says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the first step. The second step is, go back to what Boston, New York, Richmond, and what we were doing in Detroit back when I was prosecutor: an absolutely coordinated strategy on gun violence鈥 that involved cooperation among state, federal, and local authorities.

鈥淲e went after every single person that committed a crime with a gun鈥夆︹墂ith whatever charge鈥夆︹塼hat led to the bigger sentence,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e communicated to potential criminals that this was going to happen. It led to the lowest murder rate in 30 years.鈥

Duggan also wants to tackle blight reduction the same way he did as prosecutor: by 鈥渟eizing the abandoned houses鈥夆︹塈 was taking entire neighborhoods at a time, filing suit against the owner of every abandoned house, saying that you can鈥檛 maintain your property in a way that鈥檚 a nuisance to your neighbor.鈥

He says he then sold structurally sound abandoned structures to families. 鈥淲hen you fill in the abandoned houses鈥夆︹塼he rest of the neighbors don鈥檛 want to move out.鈥夆︹堿 lot of people remember that program, and they want to bring it back.鈥

BENNY NAPOLEON:

鈥淲e have to start by stabilizing the population and then grow it. And that will only happen when people really believe that they are going to be safe, that you can educate your children in their neighborhoods, and that you have quality services.鈥

To make things safer, Napoleon says he plans to 鈥渉ave an officer assigned to every square mile of the city鈥夆︹塗hat officer will be responsible for focusing on those quality-of-life issues that [affect] the people of that neighborhood.鈥

He says those officers would be better able to identify and remove abandoned vehicles and monitor 鈥渟tores and businesses that don鈥檛 cut grass, don鈥檛 pick up trash, [and] allow graffiti on their businesses.

鈥淵ou have residents鈥夆︹墂ho create issues for the rest of the neighbors when it comes to quality of life,鈥 Napoleon says. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 see that in livable, walkable, or sustainable neighborhoods鈥夆︹塗hat officer in that one square mile could set what I call a climate of compliance with the law.

鈥淲e are going to ask the people鈥夆︹墂ho have a vested interest in just that area to help clean it up,鈥 Napoleon adds. 鈥淚f we get every business to commit to cutting just one vacant [lot] every week or two鈥夆︹塼hat鈥檚 a long way towards cleaning up that square mile鈥夆︹塈f we need something for the children who play in a park there鈥夆︹墂e鈥檒l ask them to help the people who are keeping you in business. So we are going to organize to a level that鈥檚 never been seen in this community.鈥