Motor City Gets Ready for Super Bowl; Racing Legend Penske Rallies Volunteers
The Motor City has an ambitious New Years Resolution in 2006 - restore civic pride and create a sense of optimism about its latest urban renewal efforts. When Detroit won its bid to host Super Bowl XL (40) on February 5, the city knew it had to leave an impression on visitors that didnt have anything to do with poverty and abandoned buildings. Economic and government leaders joined forces to sign up volunteers, raise funds and create a host committee to make the city more friendly towards business and visitors. Selected to head Detroits Super Bowl Host Committee was race car legend and entrepreneur Roger Penske.
Its been 50 years since Detroits decline began, when the automotive capital of the world began to lose population to expanding suburban areas. Difficulties mounted in the decades afterward, from race riots in the 60s to high unemployment in the 70s. Detroit became emblematic of difficult national tensions as Coleman Young became one of the nations first prominent African-American mayors in the aftermath of the civil rights struggle. While his election in 1973 was hailed as a major breakthrough in the color barrier, Young became known as a bull in the china shop that alienated the automakers at a time when Detroit needed employers in order to sustain a recovery.
Today, the government and business community appear to be singing off the same song sheet and have a vested interest in repairing the citys tarnished image. As evidence of restoration in progress, they point to the new Campus Martius Park, trendy downtown lofts at Merchants Row on Woodward Avenue as well as the site of the Super Bowl, Ford Field. These projects have become a blueprint for future city projects that involve tax incentives for business owners and a mindset that is more focused on reinventing the city than trying to recapture its past. However, skeptics point to the citys nagging credit problems and vast swaths of vacant buildings at a time when Detroits day of dominance in the auto industry appears to be over. No one is talking about reducing unemployment while General Motors faces bankruptcy and the citys other auto manufacturers struggle to reverse shrinking market share on an annual basis. But the greatest challenge may be to convince Detroits own lifelong residents that the renewal is real, since conventional wisdom in Motown holds that the most significant improvements have been largely cosmetic.
Still, it cant be a bad thing to have community, business and government leaders working towards positive changes and get a city mobilized in the right direction - and it isnt every year that you get to host the Super Bowl.
Copyright © 2006, MuniNet Guide



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