In late October, a few days after local news cameras swarmed Detroitās courthouse to hear closing arguments in the cityās historic bankruptcy trial, āCommanderā Dale Brown cruised through the stately Detroit neighborhood of Palmer Woods in a Hummer emblazoned with the silver, interlocking-crescent-moon logo of his private security company.
Brown rolled down the window to ask a middle-aged woman walking her dog whether everything was okay (it was), and whether she had seen anything out of the ordinary (she hadnāt). Satisfied, he continued on, guided by a futuristic tablet map of the neighborhoodās languid streets. These had become even more impenetrable last year when the bankrupt city paid for and constructed a series of traffic barriers on the communityās edges. On his right, he pointed out, was the Bishopās Residence, a 30-room Tudor Revival castle originally commissioned by a family of fabulously wealthy automobile pioneers who later sold their company to General Motors.
āThis is the part of Detroit that most people are not aware of,ā Brown told filmmaker Messiah Rhodes and me. And indeed, the turreted neighborhood did look far more like something you would find in Detroitās mostly white suburbs than deep inside the city itself.
Brown is the founder of Threat Management, a private security company hired by the Palmer Woodsā neighborhood association to provide 24-hour protection to this elite enclave. He knows the two sides of Detroit more intimately than just about any of its residents. After a stint as an Army paratrooper, he moved to the cityās East Side in the mid-1990s and into a neighborhood dubbed ācrack alley.ā There, he started running free security for his neighbors and a few adjacent apartment buildings with only a rifle, a dog, and psychological tricks like heavily pocketed vests, since āpockets represent the unknown.ā Next, he worked at a nightclub, enforcing such a strict no-beating-women-on-the-dance-floor policy that the joint soon had a regular stiletto-heeled line out the door.
Two decades later,Ā Brownās officers, with their distinctly paramilitary aesthetic, are among the most recognizable of aĀ burgeoningĀ number of private security personnel and surveillance systems scattered across neighborhoods in the former Motor City that people with money have decided are worth protecting.
But the future of the rest of the sprawling city — once the symbol of American industrialization and working-class power — remains at best insecure, physically and financially. In the 1940s, President Franklin Roosevelt declared Detroit, then the nationās fourth largest city, the āgreat arsenal of democracyā for churning out bombers for the Allied powers, as in peacetime it rolled out cars for the consumer economy. Then the auto giants began closing their urban factories andĀ reopeningĀ their plants in white suburbs. In the same era, the industry, national unions, and the FBI allĀ cracked downĀ on the labor organizations founded by radical black workers.
The foreclosure crisis of this century, fueled by racially discriminatory predatory lending,Ā forcedĀ hundreds of thousands of residents out of the city. The governorās office placed the public school system and then the entire local government under emergency management,Ā suspendingĀ the democratic process in the āarsenal of democracy.ā And now, after seven decades of these slow-moving storms, including acts that are almost impossible to see as anything but retribution against the cityās predominantly African American population, Detroit is oftenĀ viewedĀ from afar as a cautionary tale, a post-industrial dystopia of vacant buildings and dormant factories.
The truth, however, is more complicated. On the brink of a new, post-bankruptcy beginning, Detroit is really two cities. One is comprised of wealthy enclaves like Palmer Woods linked to a compact, rapidly redeveloping downtown. The other is made up of the rest of the 139-square-mile urban expanse, populated by longtime residents who have fought for decades to survive in an environment that has become increasingly uninhabitable.
In the first Detroit, private security isĀ commonĀ and the living is relatively safe. In the second, running water has systematically been cut off from at leastĀ 27,000 householdsĀ this year alone, the latest in a series of government-enacted policies that have made daily life an increasingly desperate battle. Rather than growing closer in the coming post-bankruptcy era, many residents fear that these two Detroits — already so separate and unequal — will have increasingly divergent futures.
Prophecy Fulfilled
On November 7th, a federal judge approved the city of Detroitās plan to exit the largest municipal bankruptcy in American history. That bankruptcy, the need for which was hotlyĀ contestedĀ by residents and leading economists, was only the latest in a series of controversial steps that included Governor Rick SnyderāsĀ impositionĀ of an unelected emergency manager to oversee the cityās finances.
After 16 months of wrangling, city and state officials expressed cautious optimism about the bankruptcy deal, which eliminates more thanĀ $7 billionĀ in long-term city debt and includes cuts to the pensions of city workers,Ā a violationĀ of the state constitution. Creditors and insurance companies agreed to acceptĀ less than fullĀ repayment of the debts owed by the city, in some cases as little as 14 cents on the dollar. The plan also frees upĀ $1.7 billionĀ for Detroit to reinvest in essential city services like the fire department and the rebuilding of its system of streetlights.
The new debt readjustment plan is not, officials cautioned, the solution to all the cityās problems but at least they consider it a good start. For Wayne State law professor Peter Hammer, however, lurking in the bankruptcy plan is a potential future thatās far more sinister than anyone is advertising. As Hammer explained, Detroit has become a blueprint for the creation of a āself-acknowledged, self-defined second-class city,ā one where the state guarantees only the most basic services to most of its inhabitants: āsome police,ā āsome fire protection,ā and āa bulldozer departmentā to raze abandoned houses, while the remaining essential services will be available only on a private basis for those who can pay.
That Detroit is a more thanĀ 80%Ā African American metropolis makes the idea of its rise from bankruptcy with second-class status all the more problematic. As Hammer explains, the plan for Detroit bears an eerie back-to-the-future resemblance to the famedĀ Kerner CommissionĀ report of 1968, issued by a presidentially appointed panel in the wake of the urban rebellions that were then sweeping the country. Its findings were that the nation was moving towardĀ two societies: black and white, separate and unequal.
āThat was viewed as a call to action, as unacceptable in 1968,ā comments Hammer. Nearly a half-century later, he adds, itās portrayed as progress. The vision of a future Detroit as a sprawling second-class black city with a small, wealthy downtown and a few elite neighborhoods surrounded by thriving white suburbs will, he projects, bring the 1968 finding to life. āThe truth is, what [bankruptcy] Judge Rhodes will do when he approves the bankruptcy plan of adjustment is ratify that conclusion as prophecy.ā
Uninhabitable
On a Friday in mid-October, the evening before two U.N. officials were to begin investigating whether Detroitās mass water shutoffs constitute a violation of international human rights law, Marian Kramer was rushing around finishing up last-minute preparations. There were out-of-town guests to attend to, children who needed to be picked up from the YWCA, details to confirm for the following morningās meeting with the lawyers.
Kramer, who has closely cropped gray hair and a stride like the snap of a rubber band, is one of the leaders of the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization, a union of low-income people. She and co-organizer Maureen Taylor have been fighting water shutoffs since Highland Park, an independent city enclosed by Detroit, first began disconnecting water service in the 1990s. Hers is among a collection of groups — known as the Peopleās Water Board Coalition — that called on the United Nations to pay Detroit a visit.
As Kramer shuttled about in her minivan, she narrated the history of the streets rushing past. Detroit is, after all, a city best understood by driving past its steepled churches, past the barbecue joint that, back when the auto factories were still open, attracted lines around the block, past the cluster of people congregating with candles on a street corner, while all around them, dusk invades the space ceded by decommissioned streetlights.
āSomeone got killed over here,ā Kramer murmured, surveying the small vigil. āA three-year-old girl gotĀ shotĀ the other night. Her momma was shot, her father was shot. I donāt know what it is. Every night, every morning, we wake up and thereās pure war here.ā
As the city government has receded, a lack of services has made parts of Detroit all but uninhabitable. The injustices pile up: theĀ threatĀ that Child Protective Services will seize custody of children who are living in waterless homes; the streets upon streets of emptied houses, their roofs caving in, their porches collapsing, their bricks blackened by fire; the all-too-commonĀ violent deathsĀ in neighborhoods without private security, where residents must rely on a decimated public police force that clocked an average response time ofĀ 58 minutesĀ in 2013; the charade of public school board meetings, where few decisions can be made because the school district is under the control of an unelected emergency manager the board hasĀ votedĀ three times without success to fire; theĀ deathĀ of a seven-year-old girl at the hands of a Detroit police officer wielding a submachine gun as his unit was being filmed executing home raids for an A&E reality TV show; the heartbreak of watching the city being disassembled and sold off as if at an estate sale — despite the fact that this Detroit has declared it will not die.
Tangela Harris, whose tap was turned off for 11 days last fall, explained that the worst insult wasnāt living with two young children in a house without water, but DetroitāsĀ loss of controlĀ over a once-world-class water department, a stipulation of the bankruptcy adjustment plan. āThere was pride in the water company,ā she says. āThe one piece of power that black people had in this city is now gone.ā
Across this Detroit, the grief comes pouring out in town hall meetings and in the booths of diners (known locally as āConey Islandsā). Many here quietly wonder about the purposefulness of it all or, as one resident finally asked the U.N. officials during their visit: āDoes this, all that youāve heard, meet the legal definition of genocide?ā
And yet, despite these injustices and the feeling of bitterness that go with them, each morning this Detroit, too, rises.
Point of OriginĀ
Retired city construction inspector Cheryl LaBash rarely ventures downtown any longer. The last time she did, it was to protest what she sees happening to her city. We sit together in a small park calledĀ Campus Martius, which allocates about the same amount of square footage to a ritzy restaurant and a seasonal ice skating rink ($8 for adult admission, $7 for children) as to green space. LaBash has shoulder-length, white-streaked hair and wears a t-shirt that reads, āHands Off My Pension.ā Sheās also carrying her old hardhat, just as a memento. Sheād worn it during one of her final jobs with the city, supervising a team of construction workers as they tore up the ground right below where we were sitting.
The objective was to move Woodward Avenue, one of the cityās main thoroughfares, in order to clear the space to build Campus Martius. During the construction process, LaBash remembers discovering that the survey marker for southeast Michigan — the point of origin from which the entire region is measured — lay underneath the new park. That only strengthened her feeling that the transformation of this space from a main public thoroughfare into a privately administered park patrolled by corporately hired security guards was a symbol of the privatization that her city had undergone.
Today, the downtown section of Detroit hums with construction projects and is dotted with surprisingly expensive parking lots. Even as much of the rest of the city is neglected, it is being rapidly transformed. Most of this change is beingĀ drivenĀ by Dan Gilbert, the billionaire founder of Quicken Loans, one of the largest mortgage companies in the United States. In 2010, heĀ movedĀ the companyās headquarters from the suburb of Livonia, Michigan, to downtown Detroit and brought thousands of his employees into the city center with him.
Gilbert has also taken matters into his own hands when it comes to securing his rapidly expanding downtown empire. Heās organized his ownĀ 24/7Ā private security outfit, which patrols his approximatelyĀ 60Ā buildings on foot, onĀ bikes, and in cars. Heās also had hundreds of closed-circuit cameras installed in the area. Gilbertās men monitor the feeds from those cameras (along with theĀ social mediaĀ accounts of residents and community groups) around the clock in theĀ surveillance centerĀ in the basement of the Gilbert-owned Chase building.
āYou feel like youāve got into a deep room of the Pentagon,ā says law professor Hammer on the surveillance room, which he recently toured with his students.
For new downtown residents, the rising levels of security and surveillance are considered a welcome — if sometimes perplexing — phenomenon. Patrick Klida, a young lawyer from the suburbs who moved downtown a few years ago, tells of an early morning call he received from Gilbertās men last summer.Ā His car, he was informed, was being broken into.
āThe high-def cameras had found someone throwing a rock through the car window,ā he explained. Within minutes, Gilbertās security monitoring team had run the carās plates, discovered that it was registered to his mother, located her number, called her at five in the morning, gotten his number, and called him.
To Cheryl LaBash, however, this new private security set-up isnāt just a byproduct of downtown gentrification; itās yet another threat to Detroitās crippled democratic process and the ability of its residents to express political dissent. Last February, private security guards stopped LaBash and a handful of other demonstrators from pamphleting and gathering petition signatures inside Campus Martius, which she believes is an encroachment of her First Amendment rights. The legality of the move may soon be contested, since Campus Martius is one of a number of Detroit parks that, while privately administered, is still officially publicly owned. As for why it seemed like the security guards were expecting the group of pamphleteers, one officer explained to LaBash, āa little birdie told us,ā an apparent reference to the monitoring of activist Twitter accounts.
As LaBash sees it, the revitalization of the area isnāt part of an effort to revive āDetroitā; itās a process meant to erase the cityās history and the vast majority of its people, including herself. She ponders the complicated ways in which such processes are so often driven by the few but executed by the many.Ā Gesturing toward the park, she says ruefully, āAnd I was part of that change.ā
Collisions
In a city of less than a million residents, the two Detroits nonetheless seem to collide at every turn.
The night before Halloween, known locally as Angelās or Devilās Night, the neighborhood association of East English Village, another of Detroitās wealthy enclaves, hosted a potluck dinner and organized a volunteer resident security patrol. Setting vacant buildings afire on this night has become something of a grim yearly tradition in the city and a growing danger to neighborhoods that canāt afford their own privatized security forces. Although, unlike poorer areas of the city, this wealthy and well-organized community hasnāt suffered anything worse than a broken window on Devilās night in years, it wasnāt taking any chances.
Around nine, as residents clustered in association president Bill Barlageās driveway, drinking hot cocoa and eating chili and bacon-wrapped sweet potatoes, newly elected mayor Mike Duggan arrived.
āDoes Joe Biden live here?ā Duggan asked jokingly, provoking a wave of laughter.
The vice president had indeedĀ visitedĀ Barlageās home during a trip to Detroit on Labor Day weekend because, as Barlage put it, āThe mayor wanted to show Biden a solid neighborhood.ā In Barlageās mind, the communityās success can be explained in part by its willingness to invest in private security, raise an active volunteer patrol, and generally keep its residents engaged and active. In addition, Barlage and the association promote continuing close relationships with both the city police department and the mayorās office.
āWe watch houses, we log houses,ā he said.
A few blocks from his house, however, East English Village resident Andrew Cox has had quite a different experience in the neighborhood. For the last two years, he and his fiancƩe have been living in East English Village in the same way that thousands of poor residents elsewhere in the city have survived the economic turmoil: by occupying a vacant house, fixing it up and paying utilities. Like others in their situation, he and his fiancƩe were also putting a percentage of their monthly income into a bank account administered by a community group in order to collectively pay costs like property taxes.
A handsome thirty-something with a navy blue cabbie hat cocked at an angle on his head, he said he hadnāt found East English Village particularly welcoming. Earlier in the year, he explained, someone broke into the house and destroyed much of the kitchen, removing doors from their hinges and knocking out part of a wall. The break-in happened despite the communityās tight-knit watch group or perhaps — and this was his suspicion — because of it; because, that is, he and his partner didnāt fit the neighborhoodās profile and some members wanted to see them go.
Mostly, he was glad that the intruders hadnāt taken his great grandmotherās King James Bible, which the family had brought up from the South with them decades ago. In the wake of the break-in, he had received an eviction notice, which he wasnāt going to fight, since the state had recentlyĀ enactedĀ laws that made squatting a felony.
āIām not going to jail just to have a roof over my head,ā he said. āIf they want the house so bad, they can have it.ā
Back at Barlageās place, the mayor was shaking hands and preparing to leave. āWell, looks like the neighborhood is safe,ā Duggan declared to another round of laughter as he and his men strode down the driveway.
Eyes Donāt Cry
That Sunday evening, Marian Kramerās weekend of work was almost over.
The town hall meeting for the visiting U.N. officials had ended after dozens of testimonies on what it meant to live without running water. Although there hadnāt been enough time for everyone to speak, people were now filing out of the atrium of a local community college, heading home to prepare for another week.
Some, however, were staying for the buffet of chicken, rice and beans, salad, steamed vegetables, and sheet cake. āCommanderā Brown and his wife, also a security officer with Threat Management, were keeping a close eye on the two U.N. officials, accompanying them in line and even to the bathroom.
Finally, after the dinner was over and the guests had been thanked for investigating the water shutoffs, Stevie Wonderās āMy Eyes Donāt Cryā filled the large room. Dozens of people began heading for a corner that quickly became a makeshift dance floor. Soon, just about everyone fell into step: Maureen Taylor and the U.N. officials, out-of-towners and locals, a public school teacher, a school board member, and a man who had recently parked his wheelchair in the middle of a street to block the water trucks from heading out to turn off some more taps.
Despite the hours of testimonies over that weekend by residents living without water, by mothers fearful of losing their children and careful to conserve every drop of moisture — āI donāt cook rice, beans, anything that would cause evaporation,ā explained one woman — a sense of joy and relief, mixed with the heady sweetness of chicken, pulsed through the crowd. One resident broke into a smile as she pivoted in her chair and surveyed the cluster of people calling out the steps and moving together, as if there were no kitchens without running water, no private surveillance cameras, no bankruptcy, no emergency manager, no emergencies at all — as if, for a moment, there were not two Detroits, separate and unequal, but just one city, hell-bent on survival.
āThis is why they canāt kill us,ā she said.
And these words summed up, perhaps more than anything else, the history of this side of Detroit — and whatever promise may lie in its future.
Laura Gottesdiener is a freelance journalist based in New York City. The author ofĀ A Dream Foreclosed: Black America and the Fight for a Place to Call Home, her writing has appeared inĀ Mother Jones, Al Jazeera,Ā Guernica,Ā Playboy,Ā RollingStone.com,Ā and frequently atĀ TomDispatch. She is currently working with Zuccotti Park Press on a book about climate change and displacement. Sheās especially grateful toĀ filmmaker Messiah RhodesĀ for his collaboration on this article.
This article first appeared on TomDispatch.com, a weblog of the Nation Institute, which offers a steady flow of alternate sources, news, and opinion from Tom Engelhardt, long time editor in publishing, co-founder of the American Empire Project, author of The End of Victory Culture, as of a novel, The Last Days of Publishing. His latest book is Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World (Haymarket Books).
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