Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,187
My grandparents were on 6 Mile and other ones were 12 Mile.
I remember visiting them in my youth in the 70-80's. 6 mile was not great in the 70's, however in the 80's we would drive around and take pic's of the burned out cars and houses there.
Areas of MI have been depressed for a long time. I can't imagine the spread of it. People will have to go out of state.
We compare St. Louis to Detroit. We are bleeding corporations. Plant closures and layoffs effect our economy here.
I hope that we really start up a renewable energy program. There is real area for brand new jobs. I would love to build a house that makes money (off the electricity). We looked into it and the incentives to help get this off the ground will require government intervention. Just a fact. I think it is the right way to go. Other countries are ahead of us. We need to come into the 21st Century.
Small world - I grew up on 12 Mile!
Oddly enough, much of Detroit looks better now than it did back in the 80s, and downtown almost looks like a real city again. I don't imagine it can last, though, when the whole region is hurting the way it is now.
There are those out there with the vision that I think it will take to turn things around. There is one group building a biodiesel plant in Detroit that will be able to operate not only on corn and soybeans but also sunflower, rapeseed, etc. Somewhere, I read a suggestion that some of the crops used might eventually be grown on vacant land within the city itself, which is a brilliant idea - put the land to use, reduce blight, and help the community and the environment. I just hope that the downturn in our national economy doesn't undermine that kind of thinking just when it is needed most.
