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Michigan’s economy is improving. But suburbs may face next fiscal crisis.

2018 Michigan Solutions Summit on Good Government thriving cities panel

Michigan’s economy is mostly recovered from Great Recession, but more than 150 communities still face serious long-term financial challenges. The next frontier of money problems?

Suburbs, says Eric Scorsone, deputy treasurer for Michigan.

“My guess is that the next wave of fiscal problems will be more likely in the suburbs than the cities,” Scorsone said. As Detroit and other cities rebound, “the problems are moving, they’re migrating,” Scorsone said.

Related: In Michigan, more than 150 communities are financially distressed
Related: 2018 Michigan Solution Summits ‒ Reserve your seat today!
Related: Be a part of the 2018 Michigan Truth Tour​

His comments came Wednesday during a panel discussion Wednesday at The Center for Michigan’s Solutions Summit in East Lansing. Joining him to discuss problems facing municipalities were Jill Roof, research associate at the Citizens Research Council of Michigan, and three mayors: Mark Huizenga of Walker, Karen Majewski of Hamtramck and Bill Wild of Westland.

All agree there is no one solution. Roof suggested state lawmakers give local units of government more taxation options to consider for their city in order to curate a variety of revenue streams.

“Cities are contained by state law in the revenue they can raise,” Roof said. “There are a lot of options. Some will work for some areas, some will work  better for other areas... But cities can’t diversify their revenue sources unless the state allows them to.”

Huizenga said municipalities should  “keep their house in order” by paying down unfunded liabilities, minimizing borrowing and encouraging public-private partnerships.

Minimizing bonding, paying for projects up front and paying down unfunded liabilities. He also emphasized the importance of cities being business friendly to attract jobs and leveraging public-private partnerships, offering Walker as an example.

“We’ve really worked to strive to be open to business. We’ve really had to change the culture to not just say here’s a policy, but go above and beyond” to implement those policies and help businesses grow, said Huizenga, who is a candidate for the state House.

All agreed unfunded liabilities such as pensions are ongoing problems, and Wild said legacy problems force cities to innovate like never before. He said local communities need more help from Lansing.

Wild said it’s important for cities to identify their spending priorities, because many cities can’t raise taxes in order to balance their budget. Local leadership has inherited problems from earlier generations and as a result, “you’re seeing innovation happening at the city level.”

He also said state legislators should take a hard look at how they’re evaluating their own success.

“We have to change the scorecard in Lansing. It’s not about how many bills you’ve introduced or passed,” said Wild, who is a candidate for the U.S. House. “We have to pass bills that actually matter, that are changing our community and state.”

Hamtramck emerged from emergency management this month, and Majewski urged state lawmakers to show “funding leadership” on issues such as infrastructure and transit that are enormous costs for local governments.

Majewski said that while there are many benefits when cities are taken out from under emergency management, it’s important to address the cause of Michigan’s funding needs, and critically analyze how legislators balance the state’s fiscal needs with municipalities’.

“We can definitely see things looking up, but until we solve these broader issues of municipal funding, a systemic solution to these problems … (emergency management solutions) are still band aids for individual cases and they don’t solve the systemic problem.”

She also advocated for “funding leadership” from the state on larger infrastructure and transit challenges, which she said are enormous costs for local governments to handle on their own.

In the end, she said, economic growth is the only sustainable solution to cities’ financial woes.

“We’re not going to cut ourselves out of these problems,” she said.

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