In Detroit, it takes a block to save a neighborhood
It’s the kind of place where you brag about hosting a block party in which no one was assaulted.
It’s the kind of place where you brag about hosting a block party in which no one was assaulted.
The lease calls for the creation of a seven-member advisory committee that will oversee improvements and master planning.
“How dare someone come into this city and take away the most treasured jewel of our citizens,” Councilwoman Joann Watson steamed.
Vacate a building. Leave everything behind. That’s the Detroit way.
The secrecy raises more questions about the transparency of the EM and the state, which are handling billions of dollars and city treasures without as much as a public meeting.
It was getting dark as we met on a hardscrabble street in Detroit, just a few houses from a suspected drug den.
Metro Property Group is blamed for turning investors into “unwitting and unintentional slumlords.”
The cost to taxpayers – nearly $500,000.
An auditor general’s report paints a picture of more corruption at city hall.
At least one dog died after having nine devices implanted in her.