DetroitThe
city of Detroit filed the largest municipal bankruptcy case in U.S.
history Thursday afternoon, culminating a decades-long slide that
transformed the nation’s iconic industrial town into a model of urban
decline crippled by population loss, a dwindling tax base and financial
problems.
The 16-page petition was filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Detroit.
Gov.
Rick Snyder’s office was making plans this afternoon to hold a 10 a.m.
Friday morning news conference at the Maccabees Building, 5057 Woodward
in Midtown, according to his office. It’s the same location where the
governor declared a financial emergency for Detroit on March 1.
Snyder
authorized Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr to file bankruptcy under a law
the Legislature passed in December that replaced the previous emergency
manager law voted repealed last November.
The
bankruptcy filing came minutes before Ingham County Circuit Judge
Rosemarie Aquilina was set to hold an emergency hearing Thursday
afternoon on a request for a temporary restraining order blocking Snyder
from authorizing a bankruptcy filing.
“It was my intention to grant you your request completely,” Aquilina told lawyers for Detroit’s pension boards.
The judge did grant temporary restraining orders against Snyder and Orr taking further action in the bankruptcy proceedings.
Ronald
King, an attorney representing the police/fire and general retirement
pension systems, said he may file a motion Friday in the case seeking to
require Orr, an officer of the state, to withdraw the bankruptcy
filing.
Another Notch in the Collectivist Failure folder.
The Chapter 9 filing could take years, experts
say, despite hopes by the governor and Orr that the case can be wrapped
up in a year. A bankruptcy judge could trump the state constitution by
slashing retiree pensions, ripping up contracts and paying creditors
roughly a dime on the dollar for unsecured claims worth $11.45 billion.
Another Notch in the Collectivist Failure folder.
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