On Wednesday, Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan delivered his eleventh State of the City address. It was a rapid-fire list of wins, and areas where he wants to focus on the next year.
But what is the state of our city, from a different perspective? What if we take a minute, or an hour in this case, and unpack what's happening in Michigan's largest city with a different lens?
Chase Cantrell - he heads up Building Community Value, lectures at the University of Michigan and is an active developer - brings that lens, and we work through different angles of the topics in the speech.
This is one of the most in-depth analysis you're going to find on the speech, and whether you agree or not we'd love to hear what you have to say.
For feedback, dailydetroit - at - gmail - dot - com or 313-789-3211.
Here's the topic rundown, and an automated show transcript is to come.
01:34 - Public Safety improvements, things that work and things that maybe should get even more money as a percentage of the overall budget.
05:32 - Trauma and black flight from the city. The causes, how to address it, and what's next.
11:06 - Construction costs have skyrocketed, impacting the rebuild of empty land
12:51 - A lack of family homes in Detroit - why? How to address that?
16:12 - Environment and sustainability conversation. Solar panels vs. addressing flooding.
20:43 - Advocating for participatory budgeting
24:55 - Discussing the Detroit Promise scholarship program, and encouraging more awareness of it
29:22 - Affordable housing. We need more! What do we need to get there? And addressing the wealth of the people of Detroit.
32:32 - The underlying challanges and opportunities of wrestling with buses and transit in Detroit.
43:50 - There's going to be a new focus on abandoned vehicles.
50:17 - More of a commitment to black history, including more monuments that reflect the majority community here as much of our civic art downtown looks like it's still the Jerome Cavanaugh administration
53:56 - $3 Billion in wealth for black homeowners. What does that mean? And the gaps to help people access or build that wealth as banks are hesitant to do smaller lending (under $100,000).
As always, you can find Daily Detroit on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you download your favorite podcasts.
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