Now, the federal oversight may commence.
Detroit released from state financial oversight 3 years after exiting bankruptcy
Detroit reached a key step in fiscal
redemption on Monday by reclaiming control of its own finances roughly
three years after exiting the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S.
history.
A state review commission
unanimously agreed to release the city from state financial oversight
after Detroit delivered three consecutive years of audited balanced
budgets. The city was about $12 billion in debt and unable to deliver
basic services like prompt responses to 911 calls and park maintenance
when the state took financial management.
"Detroit is once again finally a city of full self-governance," Mayor Mike Duggan said following the commission's vote.
The
change means that when contracts are approved by the City Council,
Detroit won't have to wait for the commission to approve them. But the
city must still submit monthly financial reports to the commission,
which will continue to monitor Detroit's fiscal health for the next 10
years and could resume oversight if a budget deficit occurs.
Gov.
Rick Snyder placed the city under state receivership in early 2013,
angering local officials and some residents because the move essentially
stripped power from the City Council and mayor's office. The Republican
governor also appointed turnaround expert Kevyn Orr as an emergency
manager to oversee Detroit's finances. The city, under Orr, filed
bankruptcy the same year.
After
restructuring about $7 billion in debt and setting aside $1.7 billion
in savings and revenue over a decade to improve city services, Detroit
exited bankruptcy in December 2014. Part of the restructuring plan was
creating the nine-member financial review commission, which is chaired
by state Treasurer Nick Khouri and includes Duggan, state Budget
Director John Walsh and former Detroit police Chief Isaiah McKinnon.
Members were given oversight of borrowing and large city-issued
contracts.
Most city operations were returned to
Duggan's control in September 2014, but Monday's action helps wipe away
the stain of bankruptcy and the anger some in Detroit carried.
"Today
is an important day in the history of our city," City Council President
Brenda Jones said. "Now, with the dormancy of the (review commission)
and a reduction in state oversight, local control is returning to our
city and its elected officials can assume the role that voters expect us
to carry out."
Under the terms of the bankruptcy,
creditors received pennies on the dollar for what they were owed and
thousands of retirees saw their pensions cut by 4.5 percent. Annual
cost-of-living increases also were eliminated.
Detroit's
general fund balance was about $595 million at the end of the 2017
fiscal year, compared to a deficit of about $73 million that the city
faced at the end of the 2013 fiscal year following years of a plummeting
population and tax base.
A $36 million operating surplus is expected for the fiscal year 2018.
Another
move by the city: Planning ahead by reducing costs and increasing
revenue. Property tax collections are up nearly 10 percent and income
tax revenues 15 percent over the past four years.
The city has been setting aside surpluses ahead of large pension and debt payments due to start in 2024.
The
financial review commission's vote "validates Detroit's remarkable
progress and path toward continued financial stability," Snyder said in a
statement. "Detroit is America's comeback city and I have every
confidence that we will continue to see Detroit reach new heights under
the city's leadership."
Credit
rating agency Moody's Investors Services, which currently rates
Detroit's credit as B1 with a "positive outlook," said Monday that
Detroit's emergence from financial oversight "is a testament to the
positive momentum the city has made in strengthening its reserves and
fiscal operations." David Levett, Moody's vice president and senior
analyst, said the agency expects "the strong financial management to
continue."
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