kaiser
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 402
- Location
- Germany, NRW, HSK
I lived in the Detroit area up until the early 1990's and could already see the decline in the city. I still have contact to people in the Detroit area, so I have been following this situation for some time now.
A combination of factors are certainly the cause of this decay, but the biggest one I think is simply the lack of good paying jobs in the area. If you are in the Automobile Industry then you are well paid, but do not live in Detroit. Good pay means that you have the ability to aford a house in one of the outer areas like Oakland County.
There may be green shoots in some parts of Detroit, but they will only be on vacant lots, and due only to very local efforts by local people or groups. Small local efforts may be a start, but they will not be a complete solution to the general problem of urban decay that many American cities are going through right now. The financial crisis of 2008 / 2009 has only accelared a problem that has been around for a good 30 years or so. If good fair paying work is not available to the population as a whole things will fall apart at some point in time. The preservation of old buildings and their contents requires for one thing money, and also the will and desire to do it. If you are worried about where your next meal is going to come from, you are not going to be thinking about saving an old Hotel. Do not forget 42 million people are on food stamps in America today, with the numbers increasing daily.
A combination of factors are certainly the cause of this decay, but the biggest one I think is simply the lack of good paying jobs in the area. If you are in the Automobile Industry then you are well paid, but do not live in Detroit. Good pay means that you have the ability to aford a house in one of the outer areas like Oakland County.
There may be green shoots in some parts of Detroit, but they will only be on vacant lots, and due only to very local efforts by local people or groups. Small local efforts may be a start, but they will not be a complete solution to the general problem of urban decay that many American cities are going through right now. The financial crisis of 2008 / 2009 has only accelared a problem that has been around for a good 30 years or so. If good fair paying work is not available to the population as a whole things will fall apart at some point in time. The preservation of old buildings and their contents requires for one thing money, and also the will and desire to do it. If you are worried about where your next meal is going to come from, you are not going to be thinking about saving an old Hotel. Do not forget 42 million people are on food stamps in America today, with the numbers increasing daily.