среда, 31 июля 2013 г.

Yes, the city has become cool again, especially the central downtown area and its adjoining neighbor


This will not be a conventional "this is my life in Detroit" blog, though I will occasionally include some of those writings to keep the blog varied and intellectually interesting. holiday travel trailer As an economist and financial professional, I write about topics that promote Detroit's resurgence of entrepreneurial and community ventures that are at the core of this city's return to prominence.
Yes, the city has become cool again, especially the central downtown area and its adjoining neighborhoods - Midtown, New Center, Woodbridge, Lafayette Park, Corktown, and the Riverfront. The new residents represent a diverse demographic group: professionals, retired empty nesters, hipsters, students, and the creative class. Mostly, they are members of the curious and adventurous middle class .
The data above shows that the greater downtown area of Detroit is experiencing a much larger return of white flight than the rest of the city. While 2010 census data shows that 21% of downtown residents were white, only 11% of the residents of the city as a whole were white.
Nobody s saying we don t want white people in Detroit. Nobody s saying that. We recognize the economic benefits to that. But in the same token it s not fair that you can come in on the block and build up and buy this lavish house and mine s is falling apart and I m trying to get illegal cable and water. I m not even going to say cable. I m going to say basic water and electricity and heat and I m rigging up stoves and opening up stoves to be hot at night. But you got a loan to pay off your house?
My observances, as well as that of my friends, would acknowledge that these types of attitudes are in the minority and are not representative of the population as a whole. Still, these small pockets of resistance to change and gentrification are visible and vocal. On the whole, Detroit, and especially the greater downtown area, has become a melting pot of diverse and interesting people who have been willing to invest their time, money, and lives in a city that has been painted as a graveyard by media bobbleheads who have never even set foot here.
I am a CPA working in the healthcare industry by day, and an economist, writer, researcher, and blogger by any other time of the week. This blog will be about the uniqueness of the Detroit resurgence due to an inept and powerless local bureaucracy (government) that cannot possibly keep up with regulating the renaissance of entrepreneurial and community ventures.
The lens through which I view things is very different from the mainstream, or even the scattered blogosphere. This will not be a standard "this is my life in Detroit" blog. Though, I will intersperse some of that stuff, along with my Detroit holiday travel trailer photography, to keep the blog varied and intellectually interesting.

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