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RandySF

(86,396 posts)
Fri Dec 27, 2013, 02:52 PM Dec 2013

Detroit: Why is there over a half billion dollar stadium deal being approved in a bankrupt city? [View all]

Though they are important, let's be honest: Municipal budget figures can be mind-numbingly boring. Even in high-profile, high-stakes dramas like Detroit's bankruptcy, the sheer flood of numbers can encourage people to simply tune it all out for fear of being further confused.

Thus, in the interest of not putting you to sleep or further perplexing you, here are three painfully simple questions about Detroit's bankruptcy. Though these questions have mostly been ignored, continuing to ask them can at least highlight the fact that something nefarious is happening right now in the Motor City.

1. Why are Detroit officials simultaneously moving to cut municipal workers' pensions while spending hundreds of millions of dollars on a new professional hockey stadium?

Gov. Rick Snyder, R-Mich., and his appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr are pleading poverty to justify cuts to the average Detroit municipal worker's $19,000-a-year pension. Yet, they are also saying they have plenty of money available to continue a planned $285 million taxpayer subsidy for the construction of a new hockey stadium for the Red Wings. Economic data over the years suggest that that paying pension benefits is often a far more powerful tool for economic stimulus than financing stadium subsidies. That's because pensions reliably pump resources into a local economy while stadium subsidies often end up a net loss for taxpayers. So why is Detroit prioritizing stadiums over pensions?



http://www.nationofchange.org/three-questions-about-motor-city-1386949240

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Bread and Circuses? NYC_SKP Dec 2013 #1
Because a half billion dollar stadium creates a half billion jobs. jsr Dec 2013 #2
Because the Billionaire pizza company owner wanted one. nt MrScorpio Dec 2013 #3
how any detroiter can step foot into that stadium is beyond me and anyone who does should be shamed leftyohiolib Dec 2013 #4
Those No Billionaire Left Behind policies are working like a charm. Egalitarian Thug Dec 2013 #5
Why is there over a half billion dollar stadium deal being approved in a bankrupt city? BobUp Dec 2013 #6
Are you in Minnesota? Vashta Nerada Dec 2013 #7
Not Minny BobUp Dec 2013 #11
Because it makes economic sense to do so. Crepuscular Dec 2013 #8
Check with Atlanta jehop61 Dec 2013 #12
We don't really need to look at Atlanta Crepuscular Dec 2013 #13
Because this sort of thing has been going on SheilaT Dec 2013 #9
Not to worry, Washington doesn't win enough. broiles Dec 2013 #17
I would not be reflexively against the idea. Of course individual projects like this have to be Douglas Carpenter Dec 2013 #10
The bonds are being issued by a state agency and no new Detroit tax money will be used. badtoworse Dec 2013 #14
So the whole state will be paying taxes to support the stadium then? RC Dec 2013 #15
They're revenue bonds. They'll be repaid out stadium revenues. badtoworse Dec 2013 #18
How much is the owner or the NHL paying for it? davidn3600 Dec 2013 #16
If the city can't afford to pay workers Aerows Dec 2013 #19
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