Posted on 06/24/2014 5:30:34 AM PDT by SJackson
Detroit: How the Left Made Water More Expensive Than Cell Phones
Posted By Arnold Ahlert On June 24, 2014 @ 12:56 am In Daily Mailer,FrontPage | 2 Comments
The latest news from Detroit, the poster child for failed progressive policies that have dominated that city for more than a half-century, is not good. In March of 2014, the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) announced it would begin cutting off water service for customers at least 60 days overdue or more than $150 behind in their water bill payments. Activists outraged by the decision have taken their case outside the cityall the way to the United Nations.
The DWSD has targeted 1,500 to 3,000 business and residential customers every week as part of a get-tough approach that would enable them to begin recouping the $118 million owed from delinquent accounts. Accounts that comprise nearly half the citys total number. As a result, the Department has shut off water service to more than 7,500 properties in the past two months alone.
“We really don’t want to shut off anyones water, but its really our duty to go after those who dont pay, because if they dont pay then our other customers pay for them,” said DWSD spokeswoman Curtrise Garner. “Thats not fair to our other customers. Garner also noted that the city has programs that help those “totally in need, but that many of the customers who can afford to pay their bills dont bother, “and we know this because, once we shut water off, the next day they are in paying the bill in full. So we do know that that has become a habit as well, she contended.
Its not the only habit of non-payment afflicting Detroit. In 2012, it was revealed that almost half of the city’s 305,000 property owners failed to pay their tax bills the previous year.
Yet the thousands of families who no longer have access to water, along with those who will shortly follow, has generated a backlash by a coalition of leftist organizations striving for water justice,” including the Detroit Peoples Water Board, the Blue Planet Project, the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization and Food & Water Watch. They have submitted a report to Catarina de Albuquerque, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Right to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation, calling on that organization to intervene. “What we see is a violation of the human right to water,” said Meera Karunananthan, an international campaigner with the Blue Planet Project. “The U.S. has international obligations in terms of peoples right to water, and this is a blatant violation of that right. Were hoping the U.N. will put pressure on the federal government and the state of Michigan to do something about it.
The groups have framed the argument in typically leftist terms, accusing the DWSD of attempting to rid itself of low-income customers in an effort to spur a private takeover of the utility. DWSD has denied the charge, but city officials are considering at least a partial takeover by private entities as one of a variety of strategies aimed at reducing the $18 billion of debt that has driven Detroit into bankruptcy. The DWSD accounts for $5 billion of that debt, and as of March, 150,806 out of the 323,900 DWSD accounts in the city were delinquent.
Detroit did attempt to integrate its water system with the water systems in the suburban counties of Oakland, Macomb and Wayne, hoping to create a jointly managed regional authority in return for a $47-million-per-year minimum lease payment. But the deal fell through when those counties wanted no part of the DWSDs debt, its delinquent customers, or an aging infrastructure with a history of disinvestment, according to the Detroit Free Press.
Despite that disinvestment, Detroit has seen a steady rise in its water bills, including a staggering 119 percent increase over the last decade. The average water bill is now an outrageous $75 a month, compared to national average of $40. For perspective sake, the average cell phone bill is $71 per month.
Nonetheless, as recently as last week the Detroit City Council approved an 8.7 percent increase in DWSD rates expected to add an average of more than $5 per month to the current bills. Council President Brenda Jones cited infrastructure repair as the reason for the hike. I do realize that in order to get the repairs done to our system, its going to take a lot of money to get those repairs because our system is very old, Jones said.
The activists are apoplectic, claiming those affected were given no time to prepare for a shut off and that some accounts were suspended prior to the deadline. “Sick people are left without running water and running toilets, writes Blue Planet Project Founder and Food & Water Watch Board Chair Maude Barlow.
People recovering from surgery cannot wash and change bandages. Children cannot bathe and parents cannot cook. Is this a small number of victims? No. The water department has decreed that it will turn the water off to all 120,000 residences that owe it money by the end of the summer although it has made no such threat to the many corporations and institutions that are in arrears on their bills as well. How did it come to this?
Unsurprisingly, Barlow blames “decades of market driven neoliberal policy that put business and profit ahead of public good. A less delusional examination reveals the usual suspects: free-spending, progressive Democrats, allied with labor unions.
Beginning in 1962, Detroit elected an unbroken string of Democratic mayors and other city officials determined to impose a progressive agenda on a city that was once the richest, per capita, in the entire nation. Democrats oversaw the failed the Model City program, fashioned after Soviet Union centralized efforts to transform entire urban areas at once. They were in control when the riots of 1967 destroyed black businesses and drove more than 140,000 people from the city. They bestowed outlandish salaries, benefit packages, and highly inefficient work rules on city unions, a move largely responsible for driving the citys mainstay auto industry to right-to-work states. And they were responsible for a series of corruption scandals, culminating in a 28-year prison term for former Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick.
All of it led to the largest municipal bankruptcy in the history of the nation, in June of 2013.
And make no mistake: DWSD workers were an integral part of the problem. As recently as 2012, the DWSD employed a full-time horseshoer collecting $56,245 in salary and benefits — despite the inconvenient reality that the department had no horses. They also had 257 separate job classifications designed to maximize the number of workers required to do even the simplest of tasks — workers whose average compensation packages came to $86,000 in 2013.
2012 was also the year when an independent report concluded that the city could slash the staffing levels at DWSD by 81 percent, due to the reality that it was using twice the number of employees per gallon as cities like Chicago. In response, John Riehl, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 207 that represents many of the DWSD employees, told the Detroit Free Press the department needed more workers.
When the Detroit Board of Water Commissioners approved the cutbacks, 950 DWSD workers went on strike in October 2012, defying a restraining order issued by a federal judge in the process. The strike lasted five days, and Riehl declared it a victory “because it has set the precedent that unions, the community and the City of Detroit can stand up against the whole array of powers-that-be and win.
In light of Detroits eventual bankruptcy, it was a temporary and Pyrrhic victory.
Today, Detroit is a city with an unemployment rate of more than 14 percent, and a poverty rate of about 40 percent, courtesy of the very same Democratic social engineering that has driven water to unaffordable levels for many of the citys poorest residents. Even more telling, given that Detroits population is 82.7 percent black, this crisis disproportionately afflicts the very same minorities Democrats claim to be protecting and nurturing.
The case of water cut-offs in the City of Detroit speaks to the deep racial divides and intractable economic and social inequality in access to services within the United States, claim the activists taking their case to the United Nations. No, it doesnt. It speaks to 52 years of progressive Democratic policies that have destroyed the city formerly known as the “arsenal of democracy. The very same policies these leftist groups would exacerbate in their quixotic quest for UN-sponsored water justice.”
I am thirsty in the desert with an empty cup.
My town turns off the water if you’re 10 days late with
the payment.
Unless you plan to stand in the rain collecting raindrops, water isn't free.
I believe you were suggesting that someone else should pay for the water they use.
Seriously?
Common decency says they made a choice.
If there are no negative consequences, there are no bad choices.
What you propose isn't sustainable.
Sorry, doesn’t change anything.
If folks want to donate of their own free will, wonderful. If not, to just make them pay for it anyway is slavery.
bkmk
It’s passed time for that corporation from the Robocop movies to become real and take over Detroit.
Yeah. Because water treatment plants are free. And people need their money for alcohol, smokes, dope and tattoos .
/s
Food should be free.
housing should be free.
Cable should be free.
/s
And just who is your selected victim to be eaten by the tribe to provide food, whose bones and skin might be used for shelter for the other members of the tribe? What doctor will be enslaved to provide the medical care?
ANY “right” one person has comes with a responsibility on the part of other people who have to pony up the means of FULFILLING that “right.” Yet, NO ONE may be enslaved or stolen from to provide for some other person. Thus, we have just a wee bit of a problem with your wish list.
A RIGHT, such as the right to life, or to freely practice one’s religion, may NOT require a POSITIVE act by another to fulfill it. A true RIGHT only requires an outside party to leave me alone to enjoy my right. That is the sole obligation someone has with respect to another person’s RIGHTS.
What YOU want is the same thing the OTHER Socialists/communists/social engineers want: a free lunch that SOMEONE ELSE MUST PAY FOR (or otherwise provide). To which any SENSIBLE person will reply, “Go s&%#@ yourself. Go get a job and pay for your own lunch or home or medical care or water. I won’t pay for yours and mine, too!!!”
Sounds good to me...
In case anyone doubted that Detroit really is Urinetown.
You had me until your third and fourth items, Comrade.
Look at Detroit!!
Any democrat run city soon turns into a detroit.
Water is but one problem.
well we pay for lots of stuff we don’t want to by paying taxes
not saying it’s right to tax anyone
just that as a Catholic it’s part of the package to care for the poor
and yes, it should be voluntary
so anyway, I don’t care, get irate
none of it makes any difference
I am just sick of seeing children in misery due to their parents being druggies
my victim?
God’s
Jesus is the victim
why cable?
Just exactly HOW would Jesus be a “victim”??? Yes, He came to be the ONE AND ONLY Blood Sacrifice for sinful humanity, the only possible ACCEPTABLE Perfect Lamb of God, to be sure, but how was He a victim?
He came voluntarily, KNOWING the outcome, ALL of it, the shame and degradation, the humiliation of dying on a cross, the stigma of that particular death; but He ALSO knew of the Resurrection and that by His death, He paid the only acceptable price to cover our sins. That His Resurrection was the proof of the promise of OUR resurrection and eternal life with Him if we only ACCEPT that GIFT and that Promise.
No, Jesus is no victim, of any sort. But the ones selected to pay for YOUR utopia are YOUR victims, just as much as if you put the gun of government to their heads yourself.
Yes, I remember the story of the rich, young ruler whom Jesus told to sell all his goods and give the money to the poor. BUT this was one person, dealing VOLUNTARILY, with HIS OWN PROPERTY. It was not a general command for believers to get government to do with OTHER FOLKS’ PROPERTY what we BELIEVERS are commanded to do with our own property.
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