Pages

Thursday, May 20, 2010

What happens in Detroit matters.


What happens in Detroit matters. It really does. No matter if you're in your cozy home in Traverse City or walking down the streets of Ferndale, what happens in Detroit matters.

Today I read an article in the paper stating that fourth grade children in Detroit scored last in the nation for reading. This follows a similar score released earlier for math. The fact that Detroit children are the worst educated children in America should alarm you. It should disgust you and it should make you think. The children of Detroit are behind the eight ball and they're only nine years old. I think you know where I'm going with this.

I mentioned Ferndale in the beginning of this post because for the most part it's where I grew up. For those of you who don't know, Ferndale sits on the Northern border of Detroit. Eight mile road is the real boarder. On the South side is Detroit and Wayne County. On the North is Ferndale and Oakland County. One usually doesn't use the word border when talking about city lines but it's what we always called it and with good reason. Growing up we always thought that Detroit was a dangerous, scary place where the law had little meaning and with good reason. Detroit represented urban decay and worse urban social decay. We often went to Detroit but we were always wary. We snuck across the border to buy booze because there was no law preventing us from doing so. On one such booze buying foray, my best friend was shot in the chest in a robbery attempt (I wrote about this previously). The shooting wasn't an isolated event. I personally know others who have been shot or seriously injured while in Detroit. In my mind Detroit has always been like a third world country. Crime, poverty, social decay and lawlessness have always been hallmarks of backward countries and Detroit is no exception, but it wasn't always this way.

From the early 1900s until the late 1950s Detroit was one of the richest cities in the world. A drive through Detroit today reveals whole sections of the city which were once filled with mansions teeming with wealthy inhabitants. Unfortunately most of those people fled Detroit years ago, leaving mostly empty neighborhoods and poor, lost people.

So, why does Detroit matter? Why, should we care what happens in a lawless city? Why should we care if Detroit's fourth graders can't read, write or understand math?

For better or worse Detroit has always been the economic engine of Michigan. In good times it's lifted us up and in times of economic woe it's been an anchor dragging us to the depths. It's as true today as it was in 1903, the year the Ford Motor Co. began.

Those fourth graders are sign of things to come. Yes it's bad now but it's going to get worse. As they age they will become increasingly frustrated by their lack of success in school. The vast majority will drop out before graduating. In 2006 only 21% of Detroit's students graduated! 21%! That means 79% will be on the streets of Detroit without a high school diploma. These kids have virtually no future. In short time they're choices will be dim. They can either, be under employed making minimum wage or they can find a way to get on public assistance or they can turn to crime. Remember, the days of a good union job are long gone. There are few options for these kids.

Under employed kids, eventually will have children if they haven't already. Soon they will be collecting food stamps or other assistance.

Turning to crime has it's obvious problems too. First they're are the victims. Next there is the exorbitant cost of policing, prosecuting and then incarcerating these kids.

No matter how you look at it these kids are going to be major drag on tax dollars. You can not ignore these kids and expect not to be affected by them.

Our only choice is to educate them. Educating children is infinitely more cost effective than the other options I've outlined. Add to that the fact that educated people give back more in many ways but predominately in taxes.

I don't know to change the educational deficiencies in Detroit. It's obvious that what we've been doing isn't working. The one thing I understand though is we can not ignore it. We can not pretend that Detroit's problem's aren't our own. If it means a wholesale change in the way we fund our schools, we should do it. If it means closing the whole school district down and start over, we should do that. If it means educating the parents at the same time we're educating their children, we should do it. The one thing we can't do is, nothing.

Today, I live in Traverse City. It's a wonderful small town community with good schools and people who geniunely care about what happens to the town and the people who live here. Traverse City seems like it's light years away from Detroit but it's not. While most people here probably have empathy for the children of Detroit, they probably don't give it much thought. It's easy not to care what happens hundreds of miles away in a city which is the polar opposite. But it matters. What happens in Detroit and to the the fourth graders who will not graduate matters to the fourth graders attending Central Grade School, in Traverse City. They will be the ones dealing with the problems created in Detroit.

So, please do not fool yourselves, what happens in Detroit, matters.

5 comments:

  1. All throughout history towns have come and gone.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Agreed. Apparently you have been paying attention. So now what? Where's the resolution? Big question.

    ReplyDelete
  3. There are lots of programs going on to resurrect Detroit... lots of Charter schools (brand spanking new buildings/campus' downtown) and supportive academic programs. Henry Ford Health System sponsors one, training high-schoolers for careers in healthcare. There is tech-town which is booming (google if interested). HFHS plans to invest in housing, and local business to support a 10 acre area south of the Hospital - an area to support those working in the System, and to grow the System - there are plans to build a new Research building and other supporting services for the Downtown location as well. They've teamed up w/ Wayne State University with a goal to make Detroit a leader in Healthcare and Healthcare education. The DMC was just bought up and the private group plans millions in renovations there... the Mayor is working hard to regroup Detroit and pull in new business... urban farming is flourishing. Wildlife is returning. The Riverfront has never looked better during my entire life!! There are things to be proud of that are going on in Detroit is my point. I work down there daily so I see it. Change is going on, for the better. Kwame ironically united those left - for the better. I think the betrayal he gave to his people finally broke that White vs Black/Suburbs vs City battle... folks are coming together and that is a good thing. Is there crime - heck yes - in a huge largely vacant city that cant afford proper officers to man such a large area, there is crime. However I predict good things to come... I predict a thriving community before my death of old age (I'm 46)... it will take time, but there is no where to go but up at this point, and there's lots to build on down there... I have hope. :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. So many times the topic of Detroit comes up and inevitably someone in the group says "fuck Detroit!" As if to say, "it doesn't matter if the city dies. They fucked it up, so fuck them". The point of this post was to say it does matter. There has been a little life breathed into the city, no doubt. But for ever step forward there is at least one step back. The school scores illustrates this fact. You can not expect to make serious strides if the education system fails the kids. I could've gone on about how poor schools make good parents flee, thus making the schools worse. I didn't because I was trying to keep the article short enough so people would read it.

    Detroit is in crisis but nobody really seems to act as if it is. I don't know how to fix it but the first step is realizing the magnitude of the problem and then opening dialogue.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I guess after having worked down there for 13 years I've known the blight and trouble and crisis... in the last 7 yrs or so there has been a mass exodus OUT of the city - even the poor have left - they must live near grocery stores after all. That's why I say there is no where to go but up... after a while, the bottom is hit, and if Detroit hasn't hit it yet, it's got to be damned close. Once there, nothing but growth and improvement ahead. Yes, the schools have failed Detroit's children, as have many of Detroit's parents, and politicians, etc... Yep, there is sadness, crime and devastation down there. I guess my point was, there is also hope. There are people investing IN Detroit - people who see opportunity and want to be a part of growing the city back... I think many realize the crisis, although that's easier for me to say being down there everyday and amongst those living and working in the city...

    ReplyDelete

Agree, Disagree or simply comment. We likes em' all.