Michigan's municipal finance model is broken
- tough to attract and retain talent.
Michigan's municipal finance model is broken
- tough to attract and retain talent.
I don't understand why he is mentioning it now, but he is correct; Michigan's municipal finance model is broken. The combination of dependency on property taxes, the various property tax limitations, and the unwillingness of the state to do adequate revenue sharing means that municipal finances are under constant strain.
Detroit doesn't have enough money because of high [[including legacy) costs and low property values, but it actually has a better finance model than most of the state's cities because it has significant income tax and casino tax revenues.
No idea what it has to do with attracting/retaining talent.
First and foremost - No one , and nothing - shut down a site I own.
I do not hate Detroit. I went to school at Wayne State in the 80's.
Registration on CASS AVENUE with paper cards, mud lots, etc., etc.
I kayak downtown on the Detroit River, Cycle on Belle Isle.
Basically shut the f up, unless you really know ME.
I do NOT read the newspaper - then post exactly what the news posted.
Actually I think for myself, create my own observations, and post them.
Some of us actually read, yes read, a LOT of stuff.
Its a skill many were supposed to learn in kindergarten and evolve.
http://www.mml.org/resources/information/finance.htm
How exactly does a CITY grow when the revenue is not there ?
That is the lack of attraction to anyone who might want to live there
If the Feds don't contribute, and the States don't contribute, who pays ??
What do you think will happen when the next big Rain Storm hits ?
We'll have exactly the same mess we had in 2011, and in 2014.
LARGE cities like Warren will again, be ruined, asking for ""aid""
Don't forget all those piddly little cities in 12TownDrain either
http://www.govtech.com/em/emergency-...ydistrict.html
Infrastructure - As an emergency disaster scenario - Exactly !!!!!
Want the roads fixed, fix the sewers at the same time the road bed is plowed up and exposed to the sky ---or wait till it fails, pay twice !!
There just ""might"" be a an extra 10,000 people/businesses in that city since anyone considered looking at the size of the pipes, capacity, etc.
from the 1950's until now.
Traffic flow - oh shit why bother, LBrooksP screwed everyone with the I-75 selfishness debacle for all taxpayers of the State [[if they use the road or not)
Last edited by O3H; October-27-17 at 10:59 PM.
I think the first and largest problem with government finances [[and this includes local and state finances, but really affects every level or government) is the spending not the taxing. Regardless of level of spending [[specific programs and their relative cost/benefits are not the point of this reply), spending needs to be kept in check: taking into account inflation & changes in taxable population. Plus, of course, programs need to be regularly reassessed. Honestly: is Detroit's budget [[adjusted for inflation) only 40% of what it was in 1950? Programs become about the employees and the spending of money, not the service of citizens. Keep spending to a minimum, and require efficient, transparent use of existing funds before raising any more.
When spending is responsible, with increases held to inflation increases- if that much- public officials might have a moral base from which to ask for more money.
Oh, and the public employee elephant in the room: if elected officials desired to be responsible [[and I am not accusing any of them of trying to be that!), all taxpayer contributions to retirement and retirement healthcare would be made at the present, into 401k-style savings plans. No future taxpayers should have to pay for the workers who are long since retired when they are paying taxes. We should pay this year for the salary, benefits and retirement earned this year. Let's not pass the buck. We have no way of knowing what the population or the economy will be like in the future. Irresponsible delay of such things was a huge factor in Detroit and Wayne County financial distress, as it is for localities and states all over the country. Doing this is very easy, except that it requires biting a bullet today, instead of passing financial injury onto the future [[or not; bankruptcies can take away a good chunk of those benefits; potentially all of them).
Bingo! Political entities grant elaborate retirement and medical benefits today without funding them in current budgets. The basis is that the elected officials will be long gone before they have to pay the piper. FDR was right that gummint employee unipns were a bad thing.
Where exactly in the US has this fiscal belt tightening been so successful for sustained economic growth over time?I think the first and largest problem with government finances [[and this includes local and state finances, but really affects every level or government) is the spending not the taxing. Regardless of level of spending [[specific programs and their relative cost/benefits are not the point of this reply), spending needs to be kept in check: taking into account inflation & changes in taxable population. Plus, of course, programs need to be regularly reassessed. Honestly: is Detroit's budget [[adjusted for inflation) only 40% of what it was in 1950? Programs become about the employees and the spending of money, not the service of citizens. Keep spending to a minimum, and require efficient, transparent use of existing funds before raising any more.
When spending is responsible, with increases held to inflation increases- if that much- public officials might have a moral base from which to ask for more money.
Oh, and the public employee elephant in the room: if elected officials desired to be responsible [[and I am not accusing any of them of trying to be that!), all taxpayer contributions to retirement and retirement healthcare would be made at the present, into 401k-style savings plans. No future taxpayers should have to pay for the workers who are long since retired when they are paying taxes. We should pay this year for the salary, benefits and retirement earned this year. Let's not pass the buck. We have no way of knowing what the population or the economy will be like in the future. Irresponsible delay of such things was a huge factor in Detroit and Wayne County financial distress, as it is for localities and states all over the country. Doing this is very easy, except that it requires biting a bullet today, instead of passing financial injury onto the future [[or not; bankruptcies can take away a good chunk of those benefits; potentially all of them).
Surely there is somewhere were it has proven to be the sure-fire hit that so many claim it is because I could point out many places that large capital investment in services, infrastructure and qualified people have been highly successful. In fact, we could just look at what’s right in your handle couldn’t we Mikey?
The problem is in the antiquated tax system in this state, because just like you stated, they are doing it like it is 1950. It makes no sense.
Back on topic. I completely agree with the OP in that the waste water and storm run off problems in this metro are FUBAR because of complete neglect over decades. Unfortunately, so are many other things, but this thread would not be the right place to make that list. Where OH3 and I part ways is how to pay for the water quality issues. Somehow he thinks pointing fingers will work this time when it never ever has before in the Detroit Metro area even though it has been tried umpteen times. In fact, the model has been proven if you want something to never be done around here, do exactly that — start pointing fingers at someone else.
Capital improvements are not only good for attracting business and improving quality of life but they are damn good for the local economy.
At issue is properly funding them with tax vehicles that work successfully in 2017 and not continually trying to do it like they did it in 1950 when it has already proven to fail in the current economy and has caused economic failure.
It's true - I take LBrooksP to task for LACK of funding infrastructure.
He knew he would never get re-elected for a Sewage Project tax hike.
This spineless jellyfish will have 12TownsDrain hung around his neck like a dead albatross to carry into the grave.
http://bit.ly/SewageLBrooksP
When LBrooksP leaves the stage, the Evolution of Oakland can begin.
A hint for those that just don't know
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albatross_[[metaphor)
And...yes it cuts BOTH ways
in Herman Melville's Moby-Dick, there is a reference to Coleridge's albatross
which is extended to fit the narrative's focus on the symbolic connotations of whiteness.
Last edited by O3H; October-28-17 at 11:35 PM.
ABD, I am not in this thread arguing for a specific level of spending on anything. Instead, I am just pointing out: a) government spending almost always grows faster than either inflation or population growth; b) there are few checks to make sure that money is spent efficiently, and only where it achieves the desired tasks; c) governments create obligations for future payment that are neither sustainable nor fair to future taxpayers. Keeping your spending at a sustainable, stable level, working for efficiency and honesty in spending, and paying for things as you go are responsible policies, whether you are right or left.
And just how exactly is "this" working in 2018+
The State Revenue Sharing program distributes sales tax collected by the State of Michigan to local governments as unrestricted revenues.
Talk to some Mayors, and get their viewpoint on "this" so called revenue......
http://www.mml.org/pdf/advocacy/mml-...heist-2014.pdf
Need more gasoline for the Fire, no problem, spill away pyro's
14 cities sue Michigan, say revenue-sharing math isn't right
http://www.freep.com/story/news/loca...suit/90118136/
Anyone that graduated university and can read - can figure out -
Michigan is most definitely NOT the place to be.
No attraction - No talent - we all loose
Last edited by O3H; October-28-17 at 11:49 PM.
That is wise.
Sometimes that's not the problem though:
Kansas Republicans raise taxes, ending their GOP governor’s ‘real live experiment’ in conservative policy.
In a decisive repudiation of conservative tax-cutting philosophy, Kansas Republicans voted this [June 7] week to reverse deep tax cuts enacted by Gov. Sam Brownback [[R), a move that lays bare the challenges of one-party control and the risks for Republicans in Washington pursuing a similar policy at the national level....
The tax reductions in Kansas had not delivered the economic growth Brownback had promised but caused massive holes in the state’s budget and led to unpopular spending cuts in areas such as education spending....
Few states are split with an Upper/Lower Peninsula.
I doubt folks in Sault Ste Marie, St Ignace, Seney, Munising, Marquette, Houghton, Ishpeming, Escanaba, and Calumet want to share TAX REVENUE with those in Flint or Detroit.
They don't. Money flows north over the bridge. Always has, always will.
I seriously doubt highly-paid executives who are stuck in meetings or reading emails for most of their day will have enough time or even interest in reading a niche forum about an increasingly irrelevant city.
Not on topic but you mentioned engineering before,are you familiar with DDC ?
And yet you get indignant when people here say something bad about your new home Atlanta.... Funny that....
It's not necessarily how I feel, but the fact is the average person doesn't care as much about Detroit as the poster I responded to seemed to think, especially people who are busy managing multi-billion dollar companies.
And frankly, I wouldn't want to tie myself down with a company that makes important decisions based on online forum posts.
Last edited by 313WX; October-29-17 at 05:33 PM.
The fact remains, Michigan is broken - economically.
Paul Egan, Detroit Free Press - Published 10:51 p.m. ET Aug. 28, 2016
The $1.2 billion in revenue-sharing payments the state
will distribute to local governments in 2016
is down from nearly $1.6 billion in 2001,
without even accounting for the effects of inflation.
An April report by Robert Kleine, a former state treasurer,
and Mitch Bean, a former head of the House Fiscal Agency,
pegged total cuts in revenue sharing to local governments,
not including counties, at $5.5 billion since 1988.
...While property values are increasing, municipalities can only increase the taxable value of any given property in any given year by the rate of inflation, which has been running well below 3%.
Last edited by O3H; October-29-17 at 08:26 PM.
And then you have another issue with another one of Detroit's outer-extent satellite cities...Toledo...which just happens to be in Ohio, which means they will never, EVER share ANY tax in ANY form with Detroit and Flint. Neither will the residents of Columbus, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Akron, Canton, Youngstown, Sandusky, Lima, Hamilton, Springfield, Athens and Zanesville.
And going back to within Michigan, people in the west side of the Lower Peninsula are seemingly trying hard to not share taxes with Detroit and Flint, to the point that some folks in the far southwest corner of the state will often associate themselves more with Chicago, yet folks there won't ever, again, share any taxes with Michigan.
MtBurb - How the didly poo did OHIO suddenly enter into Michigan 2018 +
The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 established the northern boundary of Ohio as "an east west line drawn through the southerly bend of extreme of LakeMichigan."
Why the bizzarre whacked tangent ???????????????????????????
The State of Michigan is in HUGE trouble regarding pensions.
Michigan has a massive amount of different pension systems to begin with.
They have about $ 28 Billion in assets to cover - $ 35 Billion in liability.
Direct debt, that cannot be overlooked.
Michigan Municipal revenue is in big trouble.
The USA has a large national problem with the estimated
unfunded liability of all public pensions is $ 3 Trillion dollars.
Last edited by O3H; October-31-17 at 09:19 AM.
OK... what you say is true.... but it is a very weak analogy to compare pension debt to retaining or getting talent to come here. If your analogy were true... then NO ONE would go for jobs in the Chicago area... and as we all know that is not the case.The State of Michigan is in HUGE trouble regarding pensions.
Michigan has a massive amount of different pension systems to begin with.
They have about $ 28 Billion in assets to cover - $ 35 Billion in liability.
Direct debt, that cannot be overlooked.
Michigan Municipal revenue is in big trouble.
The USA has a large national problem with the estimated
unfunded liability of all public pensions is $ 3 Trillion dollars.
https://www.illinoispolicy.org/moody...ties-top-250b/
Apples and oranges....
It's extremely connected - revenue has to come from somewhere.
Obviously the taxes should fund services and pensions.
Debt is something that needs to be paid, in real dollars, at some point
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