Community Wealth City: Detroit,
Michigan
In the 2000 census, Detroit had a population of 951,270 residents,
marking the first time since 1920 that the city's population
had dipped below one million. The city's racial composition
in that census was 81.6% African American, 12.3% White, 5.0%
Hispanic, and 1.0% Asian. As of 2006, the Census Bureau estimates
that Detroit's population has fallen by another 32,000
to under 919,000 — a number that represents more than
a 50 percent decline from the city's population of 1.85
million in 1950.
For more than four decades, many neighborhoods in Detroit
have suffered immense population decline and related urban
disinvestment and deterioration. This loss in population and
jobs is a direct repercussion of the declining manufacturing
base of the region, especially of the Big Three automakers
and the even faster shrinkage of industry parts suppliers.
The city's poverty rate in 2006 was 32.5 percent, the
highest rate for any large (population of over 250,000) city
in the country. Unemployment in Detroit is also high. In 2006,
the Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated the annual unemployment
rate in the city of Detroit to be 13.7 percent – except
for post-Katrina New Orleans, this marked the highest rate,
by far, of the United States' 50 most populous cities
(Fresno, which ranked second highest, had an unemployment
rate of 7.5 percent).
Despite the daunting task of working against the tide of
automotive industry decline, community wealth building institutions
in Detroit have had some significant successes. From 1991
through 2005, $9.5 million in loans and grants from Living
Cities and additional support from Detroit LISC helped to
generate $337 million worth of housing projects, resulting
in 3,547 affordable housing units. The fruits of rebuilding
efforts are visible in Corktown (where Tiger Stadium was located),
Mexicantown (in southwest Detroit, near the Ambassador Bridge
that links Detroit to Windsor, Canada), the Morningside neighborhood
on Detroit's east side, and in parts of downtown Detroit.
Faced with the recent spate of manufacturing lay-offs, both
the City of Detroit and the philanthropic community are stepping
up their community building efforts. The City's program,
labeled the NEXT Detroit Neighborhood Initiative, will spend
$125 million of public funds over five years to implement
six neighborhood plans that have been developed through a
15-month community planning process. The philanthropic community
has pledged $100 million to create a “New Economy Initiative”
fund that will “target companies and projects aimed
at diversifying Michigan's ‘old economy'.”
The Ford, Kresge and Kellogg foundations have each committed
$25 million, with the remaining $25 million coming from the
Knight, Hudson-Webber, Max and Marjorie Fisher, C.S. Mott,
Skillman, the Community Foundation for Southeast Michicago,
and the McGregor Fund.
Anchor Institutions
University
Cultural Center Association
www.detroitmidtown.com/05
Founded in 1976 by Wayne State University, the College for
Creative Studies, the Detroit Institute of Arts and the Engineering
Society of Detroit, UCCA aims to support the physical maintenance
and development of Midtown Detroit. In 2003, the UCCA launched
a major initiative to improve Woodward Avenue, Midtown's
main thoroughfare. To date, over $20 million has been secured
for streetscape and façade improvements and low-interest
loan programs. Today, the UCCA has over 60 members representing
the area's cultural, academic, medical and service institutions,
corporations, businesses and community organizations
Community Development Corporations
Abayomi
Community Development Corporation
www.abayomicdc.org
Founded in 1997, Abayomi is a faith-based nonprofit organization,
with origins in New St. Mark Missionary Baptist Church, serving
Northwest Detroit. Abayomi has provided community and economic
development, education, and recreation programs to over 5,000
youth and has completed the first phase of construction of
a planned 36,000-square-foot community center. The CDC also
provides home repair assistance to seniors, is developing
an asset-building program modeled on the individual development
account approach, and has plans to expand in the future into
the area of commercial real estate development.
Bagley
Housing Association
www.bagleyhousing.com
Bagley Housing Association (BHA), a not-for-profit organization
that provides resources for community development in the Hubbard
Richard and Hubbard Farms districts (and other designated
areas) of Detroit. BHA seeks to complement other efforts in
the area to build a thriving, economically, ethnically and
culturally diverse residential/business urban environment.
Specifically, BHA's goals are to: improve housing stock
for low and moderate income families; foster commercial development;
attract institutional improvement and development; promote
job creation; and address other elements needed for a sustainable
neighborhood.
Cass
Corridor Neighborhood Development Corporation
www.casscorridor.wordpress.com
The Cass Corridor Neighborhood Development Corporation (CCNDC)
was established in 1982. The group rehabilitates and builds
decent, safe and affordable housing and manages eight multi-unit
properties. The group also maintains a 3,000-square-foot community
center which is rented out for a fee for private functions
and at no cost for local nonprofit groups.
Grandmont Rosedale
Development Corporation
www.grdc.org
GRDC works to preserve and revitalize the Grandmont Rosedale
communities of northwest Detroit. Through its Housing Development
Program, the group purchases and renovates vacant homes, assists
low-income homeowners with home repairs, and builds new housing
on vacant lots. GRDC also has a Commercial Revitalization
Program, which aims to revitalize the Grand River Commercial
corridor and a Neighborhood Beautification Program, in which
volunteers plant trees, install neighborhood signs and rid
the community of graffiti.
Greater
Corktown Development Corporation
www.corktowndetroit.org
Greater Corktown Development Corporation is the result of
a merger between Corktown Consumer Housing Cooperative, founded
in the 1960s, and Greater Corktown Economic Development Corporation,
founded in 1976. The group is currently working on three residential
infill projects with a total of roughly 50 units. Now that
private investor capital is returning to the neighborhood,
plans to shift its focus to supporting commercial and retail
activity along Michigan Avenue, which straddles both historic
Corktown and North Corktown.
Mexicantown
Community Development Corporation
www.mexicantown.org
Mexicantown Community Development Corporation aims to foster
economic development in the Hispanic community of Southwest
Detroit, known as Mexicantown. Founded in 1989, its goals
include marketing, cultural programs, maintenance and improvement
of parks and streetscapes, business training and incubation,
reuse of vacant land and development of the Mexicantown International
Welcome Center and Mercado.
Northwest
Detroit Neighborhood Development
www.ndndhomes.org
Northwest Detroit Neighborhood Development is a community-based
neighborhood organization committed to building affordable
housing for low and moderate-income residents in the city's
Brightmoor community. To date, it has constructed more than
200 homes and renovated more than 30 others. NDND was also
one of a group of non-profit organizations and houses of faith
in Brightmoor that spearheaded the establishment of the Brightmoor
Alliance in 2000 to develop a broader neighborhood reinvestment
strategy that links land use, housing and commerce.
Southwest
Detroit Business Association
www.southwestdetroit.com
Founded in 1957, the Southwest Detroit Business Association
pursues economic development to stimulate investment and grow
community wealth in the Mexicantown and nearby areas of southwest
Deroit. The group disburses grants for commercial real estate
development, provides technical assistance (such as architectural
assistance for historic renovation work), and assists with
community planning and organizing.
United
Streets Networking and Planning: Building a Community (U-SNAP-BAC)
www.usnapbac.org
Founded in 1985 by a consortium of seven neighborhood organizations
and four business associations, U-SNAP-BAC works to revitalize
Detroit's east side. U-SNAP-BAC also owns a housing subsidiary,
which operates a neighborhood home repair program. To date,
U-SNAP-BAC has counseled over 900 families; aided in the development
of over 100 block clubs; mentored numerous small businesses;
facilitated dozens of workshops, meetings, community forums,
and neighborhood cleanup efforts; planted more than100 trees;
rehabilitated over 500 homes; and constructed over 130 new
affordable homes.
Vanguard
Community Development Corporation
www.vanguardcdc.org
Founded in 1994, Vanguard CDC serves the North End neighborhood
of Detroit with a wide-variety of programs, including youth
services, in-fill housing construction, commercial real estate
development, small business development services, and community
organizing. Among Vanguard's programs is its Urban Artist
Collective, a multi-media program for youth that teaches graphic
design, website design, project management and entrepreneurial
skills.
Warren/Conner
Development Coalition
www.warrenconner.org
Founded by Eastside Detroit leaders in 1984, the Warren/Conner
Development Coalition brings together residents, neighborhood
organizations, businesses and business associations. WCDC
manages an annual budget of approximately $3 million, owns
its 30,000 square foot, renovated headquarters building and
also serves as landlord to a number of service agencies. It
also supports commercial revitalization through a number of
subsidiary organizations. Over the past decades, its economic
development work has generated 200 new jobs and nearly $20
million in private sector investment.
Community Development Financial Institutions
Detroit
Investment Fund
www.detinvfund.com
The Detroit Investment Fund invests in local initiatives that
have the potential to stimulate economic development within
Detroit while generating a return for the Fund's investors.
By providing low-cost, mezzanine financing, the Fund helps
leverage owner equity and attract bank capital to support
local investment. To date the fund has lent out over $43 million,
attracting a total of $392 million. Projects funded have included
real estate development, commercial and industrial lending,
and seeding of more specialized community development loan
funds.
Michigan Interfaith Trust Fund
www.interfaithtrust.org
Founded in 1985, the Michigan Interfaith Trust Fund fosters
economic and social justice by providing loans and technical
assistance for affordable housing and economic development
throughout Michigan. In the past 20 years, the fund has lent
out $24.3 million in affordable housing and business development
loans, which have leveraged an additional $89.7 million, helped
finance 1,916 units of housing and supported the creation
of 192 jobs.
ShoreBank Enterprise Detroit
www.sbk.com/bins/site/templates/child.asp?area_2=pages/det/main
ShoreBank Enterprise Detroit is a subsidiary of the Chicago-based
Shorebank community development bank, which provides loans
and technical assistance to small businesses in Detroit. Since
2001, ShoreBank has invested over $48 million in financing
to revitalize economically depressed neighborhoods in Detroit.
It also provides its customers with much-needed information
about how to use financial services effectively to build their
assets.
Cooperatives
Back Alley
Bikes
www.backalleybikes.org
Back Alley Bikes is a collectively run community bike space
that repairs bikes and aims to provide a community space for
education and empowerment. The shop was started by Detroit
Summer volunteers in 2000 to offer transportation for youth
involved in community gardening and mural projects. Since
then, the shop has grown to fill a void in the Cass Corridor
and greater downtown area as a neighborhood bicycle community
center.
Cooperative
Optical Services, Inc.
www.coopoptical.com
Co/op Optical is the largest not-for-profit provider of vision
care services in the state of Michigan. Formed in 1960, they
pioneered prepaid vision programs in Michigan. As a cooperative,
the group contributes to health care cost containment in eye
care by providing funded program coverage at reasonable rates.
Cass Corridor Food Co-op
www.geocities.com/casscorridorfoodcoop/index.html
Founded in 1972, Cass Corridor Food Co-op is member owned
and operated. Members in good standing receive 10% off their
total bill every first Saturday as well as a free quarterly
newsletter, and special members-only discounts.
Detroit
Edison Credit Union
www.detedcu.org
Organized in 1944 to provide financial services for Detroit
Edison employees, Detroit Edison Credit Union has grown to
provide loans and savings services to more than 28,000 members.
As of September 2007, the assets of the credit union exceeded
$485 million.
Cross-Sector Initiatives
Center for Community-Based
Enterprise
www.c2be.org
Launched in 2006, the Center involves a collaboration of socially
oriented investors and business developers who seek to make
Detroit a national applied innovation lab for community-based
wealth creation strategies. The group's mission is to
develop, prototype, and launch strategies to create and support
community-based enterprises in Detroit, and to create models
that will enable the emergence of similar community-based
enterprises everywhere. One fundamental principle behind the
approach is to create a form of “rooted” wealth-creating
capital committed to operating in a specific community through
its ownership structure, business model, or by-laws.
City Connect Detroit
www.cityconnectdetroit.org
City Connect Detroit aims to facilitate collaboration among
nonprofits, governments, businesses, grant makers, and others
in the metro Detroit region. The group's website includes
information on available grants, trends in philanthropy, research
and resources to assist area nonprofits with capacity building
and forming cross-sector partnerships.
Foundations
Community Foundation
for Southeastern Michigan
www.cfsem.org
Founded in 1984, the Community Foundation has to date distributed
more than $260 million to support thousands of charitable
activities. The Foundation has grown to over $570 million
in assets and holds more than 860 funds established by individuals,
families, businesses, nonprofit organizations and private
foundations. Among these funds is its Detroit Neighborhood
Fund, which aims to strengthen near-eastside neighborhoods
by encouraging collaboration and stimulating investment in
this area of Detroit. The Community Foundation also will be
the managing agency of the planned $100-million Detroit “New
Economy Initiative” Fund.
Ford Foundation
www.fordfound.org
Incorporated in Detroit but headquartered in New York since
1953, the Ford Foundation has recently made a renewed commitment
to its original hometown, leading the effort to create the
Detroit “New Economy Initiative Fund” by pledging
$25 million toward the fund's creation. In 2007, Ford
also made $2 million grants to support three leading area
cultural institutions: the Charles H. Wright Museum of African
American History, the Arab American National Museum in nearby
Dearborn, and the Detroit Institute of Arts.
Hudson-Webber
Family Foundation
www.hudson-webber.org
Created in 1984 through the merger of two family foundations
with origins dating back to the late 1930s and early ‘40s,
the foundation concentrates its giving primarily within the
City of Detroit and has a particular interest in the revitalization
of the urban core. During 2006, the Foundation provided grants
totaling $3.7 million. The foundation has pledged $5 million
in support of the Detroit “New Economy Initiative”
Fund.
John S.
and James L. Knight Foundation
www.knightfdn.org
Since 1950, the Knight Foundation has given awarded grants
in excess of $1 billion, including 556 grants in the Detroit
area totaling more than $76 million. Among these are grants
that address community development and neighborhood revitalization,
education and job readiness for the city's workforce,
and the city's development of a community wireless strategy.
Knight also has committed $10 million to the multi-foundation
Detroit “New Economy Initiative” fund.
Kresge Foundation
www.kresge.org
Headquartered in the Detroit suburb of Troy, the Kresge Foundation
is developing a multi-year five-part strategy to support the
long-term health and stability of the Detroit region. The
Detroit Program consists of five priorities: 1) neighborhood
improvements, 2) economic development, 3) support for arts
and cultural institutions, 4) downtown Detroit revitalization,
and 5) enhancing the city's environment and natural
resources. Kresge is also one of the three principal $25-million
anchors to the $100-milion, multi-foundation Detroit “New
Economy Initiative” fund.
Skillman
Foundation
www.skillman.org
This Detroit-based foundation focuses its effort on developing
good schools and good neighborhoods for children. The foundation
is focusing the bulk of its grant dollars in six Detroit neighborhoods
- Southwest Detroit (Vernor and Chadsey-Condon), Brightmoor,
Osborn, Central, and Cody-Rouge.
W.K Kellogg
Foundation
www.wkkf.org
In addition to being one of the three principal $25-million
anchors to the $100-milion, multi-foundation Detroit “New
Economy Initiative” fund, the Kellogg Foundation has
been a strong supporter of the Detroit Riverfront Conservancy,
committing $17 million to the effort between 2004 and 2006.
The Riverfront effort aims to leverage private capital to
build housing and retail, and make improvements in public
safety or transportation in low- and moderate-income areas
in Detroit north of Jefferson so that residents will share
the benefits of the riverfront improvements.
Municipal Ownership
Riverview
Energy Systems
www.landfillenergy.com/popups/riverview.htm
Located in Riverview, about 20 miles south of downtown Detroit,
the Riverview gas recovery project is a city-owned enterprise
that was constructed in 1987 and has been selling power to
Detroit Edison since 1988. Power production from the gas brings
in more than 40,000 megawatt-hours of electricity per year
and reduces annual sulfur dioxide emissions by over 1,200
tons. Riverview's royalties covered the construction costs
in its first two years of operation and now add to the city's
cash flow.
Policy Advocates
Community
Legal Resources
www.clronline.org
Community Legal Resources delivers free legal services to
nonprofit organizations building neighborhoods in Detroit
and throughout Michigan. Their mission is to foster pro bono
legal representation for unfulfilled legal needs of nonprofit
community organizations in Michigan that serve low-income
individuals and communities, with an emphasis on community
economic development activities. Since 1998, Community Legal
Resources has provided over 550 nonprofit organizations with
free legal services valued at an estimated $5.5 million.
State and Local Policy
NEXT
Detroit Initiative
www.ci.detroit.mi.us/NextDetroit/tabid/1521/Default.aspx
Launched by the City in 2006, the Next Detroit initiative
is a five-year strategy designed to improve the quality of
life in six neighborhoods-East English Village, Osborn, North
End, Brightmoor, 7 Mile-Livernois, and Grand River-Greenfield-by
coordinating city services around the neighborhood work plans
and leveraging private investment in the targeted communities.
The city has committed $125 million to the effort and aims
to raise $100 million in matching corporate and philanthropic
support.
University-Community Partnerships
Detroit
Community Partnership Center, School of Architecture,
University of Michigan
www.tcaup.umich.edu/urp/dcpc.html
The Detroit Community Partnership Center at Taubman College
of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, supports student
and faculty research that address community identified needs
while meeting the College's educational mission. Issues
addressed include quality of life, land use, economic development,
and transportation. In one case, students and faculty have
helped develop a plan for a retail district with three community-based
organizations and have provided analysis to an organization
ready to work for greater transportation equity.
Institute of Detroit Studies, Marygrove College
www.marygrove.edu/ids/index.asp
The only institute of its kind, the Institute of Detroit Studies
was founded by Marygrove College in 2001, at the time of the
City of Detroit's tricentennial. The Institute builds
on Marygrove College's mission to serve the people of
metropolitan Detroit, on its location in the city, and on
its strong relationship with different Detroit constituencies.
Wayne State University Labor Studies Center
www.laborstudies.wayne.edu
Wayne State University's Labor Studies Center is a comprehensive
labor education center committed to strengthening the capacity
of organized labor to represent workers, while at the same
time strengthening the university's research and teaching
on labor and workplace issues. The Center's work includes
training of local union leaders as well as research on labor-community
coalitions, community benefit agreements, and regional power
building strategies.
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