http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Unable-to-pay-bill-Mich-city-apf-2920161472.html

Unable to pay $4 million electric bill, Michigan city turns off 
and removes many streetlights

HIGHLAND PARK, Mich. (AP) -- As the sun dips below the rooftops 
each evening, parts of this Detroit enclave turn to pitch black, 
the only illumination coming from a few streetlights at the end of 
the block or from glowing yellow yard globes.

It wasn't always this way. But when the debt-ridden community 
could no longer afford its monthly electric bill, elected 
officials not only turned off 1,000 streetlights. They had them 
ripped out -- bulbs, poles and all. Now nightfall cloaks most 
neighborhoods in inky darkness.

"How can you darken any city?" asked Victoria Dowdell, standing in 
the halo of a light in her front yard. "I think that was a 
disgrace. She said the decision endangers everyone, especially 
people who have to walk around at night or catch the bus.

Highland Park's decision is one of the nation's most extreme 
austerity measures, even among the scores of communities that can 
no longer afford to provide basic services.

Other towns have postponed roadwork, cut back on trash collection 
and closed libraries, for example. But to people left in the dark 
night after night, removing streetlights seems more drastic. And 
unlike many other cutbacks that can easily be reversed, this one 
appears to be permanent.

The city is $58 million in debt and has many more people than 
jobs, plus dozens of burned-out or vacant houses and buildings. 
With fewer than 12,000 residents, its population has dwindled to 
half the level from 20 years ago.

Faced with a $4 million electric bill that required $60,000 
monthly payments, Mayor Hubert Yopp asked the City Council to 
consider reducing lighting. Council members reluctantly approved 
it, even in an election year.

"We knew it was going to hurt," Councilman Christopher Woodard 
said. "We're all hurting."

In late August, contractors from DTE Energy Co. began rolling 
through the streets, taking out two-thirds of the light poles.

"It is a winning proposition, but that doesn't make it a winner 
with the citizens who find themselves in the dark," Woodard added. 
"We had to watch our backs when we got out of our cars before. Now 
we have to watch them even more closely."

Unless the government gets an unexpected infusion of cash or sees 
an uptick in its dying tax base, many parts of Highland Park will 
remain beneath a shroud every night.

The city's monthly electric bill has been cut by 80 percent. The 
amount owed DTE Energy goes back about a decade, but utility 
executives hesitated to turn off the juice.

"We are extremely concerned with public safety," said Trevor 
Lauer, vice president of marketing and renewables for the 
Detroit-based utility. "We recognize that street lighting is 
something that contributes to public safety."

Now, he said, the company has "a municipal lighting customer I'm 
confident can pay its monthly bill."

Most of the 500 streetlights still shining in Highland Park are 
along major streets and on corners in residential areas. DTE 
Energy has listed the city's overdue bill as an uncollectable expense.

The leader of a nonprofit group that works to reduce energy costs 
for low-income families said he's not heard of any other 
communities becoming so desperate to save money that they turned 
off streetlights. It might be a sign of things to come.

"If it works in Highland Park, I could not imagine other cities 
not looking at that as one option," said David Fox, executive 
director of the National Low Income Energy Consortium in 
Alexandria, Va.

In its heyday, Highland Park was one of Michigan's urban jewels, 
with large yards, spacious homes and tree-lined streets.

Henry Ford put his first moving assembly line here, and his 
factory eventually churned out a car every minute. By 1930, the 
city had grown to 50,000 people.

Ford later moved his primary manufacturing operations to River 
Rouge, southwest of Detroit, in search of room to expand. Highland 
Park survived that loss. But it never recovered from Chrysler's 
decision in the 1990s to move its world headquarters 50 miles 
north to Oakland County.

"That took away $6 million" in taxes, Woodard said. "That was a 
lot of money to not have anymore. It was a major industrial 
operation moving out of here. When Chrysler moved out, things 
started to happen."

Small businesses catering to Chrysler workers began to fail, and 
the city struggled to pay its bills. And like Detroit, which lost 
250,000 residents from 2000 to 2010, people moved out, leaving 
hundreds of abandoned houses.

In 1980, the census counted 27,000 people living in Highland Park. 
By 2010, that number had fallen to 11,776.

The median household income is $18,700, compared with $48,700 
statewide. And 42 percent of the city's residents live in poverty.

"It's pretty ghetto," Cassandra Cabil said from her front yard. 
Voices drift in the darkness from down the street, but the 
speakers can't be seen.

The 31-year-old short-order cook works odd hours and sometimes 
makes it home late at night. She watched recently as crews removed 
the streetlight and pole from in front of her rented home.

"It's really dark unless people have their lights on," she said. 
"There's a lot of vandalism going on, people breaking into these 
houses."
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