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Governor declares financial emergency in Detroit

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Detroit would be the largest city in the United States to come under state oversight, according to James Hohman, assistant director of Fiscal Policy at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a free-market think tank based in Midland, Mich.

A review team first looked into Detroit's books in December 2011, but stopped short of declaring a financial emergency. A second team began to pore over the city's finances again this past December. That report said the accumulated deficit as of June 30, 2012, would have topped $900 million if Detroit leaders in previous years had not issued bonds to pay some bills.

The city's long-term liabilities — including underfunded pensions — now total more than $14 billion. And in recent months, Detroit has relied on bond money from an escrow account to meet its dwindling cash flow needs and to pay city workers.

The review team also said that because of Detroit's cash deficit, the city would have had to either increase revenues or decrease expenditures — or both — by about $15 million per month for three months starting in January to "remain financially viable."

Bing said Thursday that Detroit's situation wouldn't "change dramatically any time soon."

"There are things Lansing can do to help to get us out of this situation faster than we can do it by ourselves," he said.

Detroit would be the sixth — and largest — city in Michigan to come under state oversight. Pontiac, Flint, Ecorse, Allen Park and Benton Harbor already have managers, as do public school districts in Detroit, Highland Park and Muskegon Heights.

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