Third world America

Collapsing bridges, street lights turned off, cuts to basic services: the decline of a superpower

by Luiza Ch. Savage on Tuesday, September 14, 2010 7:32am - 313 Comments

Danny Wilcox Frazier/Redux/ Robert Galbraith/Reuters/ Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

In February, the board of commissioners of Ohio’s Ashtabula County faced a scene familiar to local governments across America: a budget shortfall. They began to cut spending and reduced the sheriff’s budget by 20 per cent. A law enforcement agency staff that only a few years ago numbered 112, and had subsequently been pared down to 70, was cut again to 49 people and just one squad car for a county of 1,900 sq. km along the shore of Lake Erie. The sheriff’s department adapted. “We have no patrol units. There is no one on the streets. We respond to only crimes in progress. We don’t respond to property crimes,” deputy sheriff Ron Fenton told Maclean’s. The county once had a “very proactive” detective division in narcotics. Now, there is no detective division. “We are down to one evidence officer and he just runs the evidence room in case someone wants to claim property,” said Fenton. “People are getting property stolen, their houses broken into, and there is no one investigating. We are basically just writing up a report for the insurance company.”

If a county without police seems like a weird throwback to an earlier, frontier-like moment in American history, it is not the only one. “Back to the Stone Age” is the name of a seminar organized in March by civil engineers at Indiana’s Purdue University for local county supervisors interested in saving money by breaking up paved roads and turning them back to gravel. While only some paved roads in the state have been broken up, “There are a substantial number of conversations going on,” John Habermann, who manages a program at Purdue that helps local governments take care of infrastructure, told Maclean’s. “We presented a lot of talking points so that the county supervisors can talk logically back to elected officials when the question is posed,” he said. The state of Michigan had similar conversations. It has converted at least 50 miles of paved road to gravel in the last few years.

Welcome to the ground level of America’s economic crisis. The U.S. unemployment rate is 9.5 per cent. One in 10 homeowners are behind on their mortgage payments. Home sales are at record lows. While the economy has been growing for several quarters, the growth is anemic—only 1.6 per cent in the second quarter of this year—and producing few new jobs.

Even with interest rates at unprecedented lows, there is anxiety about the possibility of a double-dip recession. Sales of existing homes are at their lowest level in 15 years, and new home sales plummeted this summer to the lowest levels on record. Property and sales tax revenues have shrunk. And nowhere is this more apparent than at the local government level, where officials are being forced to roll back the everyday hallmarks of modern civilization.

Cincinnati, Ohio, is cutting back on trash collection and snow removal and filling fewer potholes.

The city of Dallas is not picking up litter in public parks. Flint, Mich., laid off 23 of 88 firefighters and closed two fire stations. In some places it’s almost literally the dark ages: the city of Shelton in Washington state decided to follow the example of numerous other localities and last week turned off 114 of its 860 street lights. Others have axed bus service and cut back on library hours. Class sizes are being increased and teachers are being laid off. School districts around the country are cutting the school day or the school week or the school year—effectively furloughing students. The National Association of Counties estimates that local governments will eliminate roughly half a million employees in the next fiscal year, with public safety, public works, public health, social services, and parks and recreation hardest hit by the cutbacks. A July survey by the association of counties, the National League of Cities, and the U.S. Conference of Mayors of 270 local governments found that 63 per cent of localities are cutting back on public safety and 60 per cent are cutting public works.

In August, the U.S. Congress passed a US$26-billion stimulus extension bill, aimed in part at saving teacher jobs. But it’s a finger in the dike. Jacqueline Byers, director of research for the counties association, said many local governments have yet to confront the full impact of the real estate crisis on government revenues because they do tax assessments only every third year. A fundamental transformation is under way. “When we come out of this recession we’re going to see government functioning very differently,” says Byers. “We are seeing more public-private partnership than we ever had for things like recreation and parks. We are seeing some of them privatize libraries. They lease the library to a private corporation that employs the workers who don’t carry retirement or health benefits.” Or they could wind up like Hood River County, Ore., which in August closed its three libraries altogether.

Some governments are looking for creative ways to replace plummeting property and sales tax revenues. Facing a US$1-billion budget shortfall, Montgomery County in Maryland appealed for corporate sponsors to step up and adopt porta-potties in its public parks. In the end, the privies were saved by a combination of park employees taking early retirement, a few private sponsorships, and a negotiated discount from the supplier, Don’s Johns. Meanwhile, Montgomery County’s school system, banking on its reputation for high standards and test scores, took the unusual step of selling its curriculum to a private textbook publisher, Pearson, for US$2.3 million and royalties of up to three per cent on sales. As part of the deal, county classrooms can be used as “showrooms”—which critics said effectively turns students and teachers into salesmen for a corporation. But the superintendent, Jerry Weast, told the Washington Post, “I tend to look at this from the perspective that we are broke.”

These cuts in infrastructure and education are more than just a temporary belt-tightening in response to a recession. They threaten long-term damage to American’s economic foundation—a foundation that has long been eroding. When the eight-lane Interstate 35 bridge collapsed in Minneapolis in 2007, killing 13 people and injuring 145, the American Society of Civil Engineers warned that the infrastructure deficit of aging postwar highways and bridges amounted to US$1.6 trillion. More than a quarter of America’s bridges were rated structurally deficient or functionally obsolete. Steam pipes have exploded in New York City and the levees failed in New Orleans.

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  • Robert

    I am really surprised that people here are arguing over who did what. You all act like this was not the plan from the start. If you want to blame someone blame the US Treasury, US FED, and Too-Big-Too-Fail (as if there was ever something more contrived) banks. Blame them because they all got together and decided hey, we run this place. We can do whatever we want, THEY gave out the bad loans, THEY created the derivatives market (now worth over 1.5 quadrillion dollars, actual value = 0), subprime, credit crunch, EVERYTHING was planned. If you morons actually think they are trying to get us out of this 'problem' then you are wrong. It is not a problem for them, they made it, they wanted it. Get a freakin clue. This is all leading up to something else, we are not going to ever go back to normal 'America'. Think about what the 'carbon tax' is going to do, you pay it to a WORLD BANK. Its World Government , also called the New World Order. The world bank and the carbon taxes are just the start of the order of the New World. If you think i am some crazy conspiracy theorist then you need to look at the news…

  • patriot2010

    When is anyone in the various forms of the media going to expose the Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) funds that each and every form of government – our alleged (un)public (dis)servants – has compiled in violation of the Constitutional restrictions regarding the fact that if government needs funding it MUST tax and not save or put aside monies for it's own personal usage?
    The total amounts of monies put aside by all forms of government is way up into the trillions of fundings; see CAFR1.com, CAFR.com, or CAFRman.com and realize that absolutely no form of government should be financially insolvent nor should there be any form of debt either national or local – period!
    Wake up america, as the last paragraph showed in the classical satire, Animal Farm, All animals are created equal. oops, , except some are MORE equal than others!!!!!!!

  • Scott

    I scanned this entire article. It failed to mention the actual illegal hispanic third world aliens which our State and Federal gov's allows to live and steal at the expense of taxpayers. Failed to mention the unrelenting amount of work visas given to third worlders that populate our cities. Failed to mention how charitable organizations (ie churches) sponsor third worlders into our neighborhoods. All these third worlders now reside in large swaths of former low to middle class white suburban neighborhoods. Our country even now superficially resembles an indigent third world nation. Anyone else notice the neighborhoods going exponentially to the dogs?? Couple all of that with subprime mortgages and section 8 in these areas. It's becoming pure chaos everywhere!

    • Tryon

      Everywhere? Except the gated communities where the journos and pols and corpos hide out.

  • http://usurykills.blogspot.com Steven G. Berry

    The answer to our financial woes has been communicated to every single President (and viable candidate) since and including Gerald Ford. Mathematically Perfected Economy(tm).

    The author of this theory is now in talks with the government of Iceland, and other European countries. MPE is viable.

    All of this misery could literally end tomorrow. We just need to understand that the flaw in Greenspan's "paradigm" was outright legalized theft via usury. Nobody likes a thief.

    perfecteconomy.com, usurykills.com

    Money is infinite. Interest is stealing. Usury kills.

  • Mary

    Hows that ''hopey''… ''changey''… thingy working fo ya??

  • WhoCaresFU

    Not to worry all. The US has been building up a successful prison state. Soon we will all either be in or working at US detention centers….

    • Tryon

      Haven't you heard? They charge you room and board now for being a prisoner the States.

      • Eek

        As they should. Why should you get free room, board, medical, clothing for killing, raping stealing?

  • Sara

    There is so much nonsense funded by our governments and lorded over by internationalists, unions and activists, it is insane. So first they cut police protection which reminds me of Washington's democrats, a long time ago, threatening to close the Washington Monument if the government union bureaucrats at Department of Interior was not given the budget they demanded. Or the time they screeched that Big Bird was being murdered when some politicans questioned the wisdom of the government funding a leftist and quite elitist television station. When such debt and economic disaster loom, kill Big Bird before you cut basic services.

  • Sea Otter

    Taxing university students to prop up fully indexed pensions for government workers – wrap your head around that for a moment. That is ludicrous, to say the least, and is a complete non-starter.

    The kind of cuts being implemented by local governments in the U.S. are painful, but not catastrophic. When times were good, it was heresy to look hard at the number of firefighters and police officers, but now it simply has to be done. The reality is that the numbers could probably do with a haircut. (I don't have a problem with how much we pay public employees – I have a problem with the endless growth in the number of them. That is the problem.)

    Ditto for not paving every last rural road, etc. A lot of these things were "nice to have", not, "need to have". The state of California, for instance, is probably going to have to take the axe to its "untouchable", the state university system.

    Sacred cows are going to have to be sacrificed, and you know what? When pressed to the wall, governments will do it, and we will all live through it.

    • GoodwoodNS

      You know what world do you want, quite a few with indexed pensions of a middle class nature or a very few benefiting from tax cuts so they don't have to pay their workers so much or their machinery cost less? Henry Ford, not exactly a Communist, knew that if you pay many a decent respectable wage they will be able to buy cars, etc. Kill the middle class and no one is left to buy big screens TV, etc. There is a concentrated effort by the wealthy to attack defined benefit pensions because they are afraid it might make their millions less, pure sick greed. Stop attacking indexed pensions of the middle class and instead fight for their expansion at the expenses of the out sized rich so our economy will be stronger.

  • Chaoscat

    I think Americans expect that when the Recession ends (supposedly it has) that things will pick up and be just like they were in the good ol' days. Those days are over. The economy cannot recover because America hasnt done anything to keep up with the new emerging economic powers. It's the beginning of the end of the Superpower America.

    You think its bad now…just wait until oil prices skyrocket in the future and America's abysmal public transportation system fails the suburban citizens. Again…America doesnt look to the future, just has been trying to hold on to what it has/had.

  • http://www.stormfront.org bob

    Why would they remove the safety mechanisms from their shotguns instead of just selecting FIRE?

  • Jake

    ''Obama asked Congress to pass a US$50-billion infrastructure spending program to refurbish roads, runways and railways. But concerns about government deficits among Republicans and some Democrats make it unlikely that any large spending package could pass Congres''

    Funny, they had no problem 'passing' a bill to supply Israel with $30 billion in 'aid'; who comes first? I wonder.

  • DAN HEALEY

    ONLY ONE PROBLEM ABOUT LOOKING TOO YOUR NEIGHBORS FOR HELP! HERE IN MONTANA YOUR NEIGHBORS ARE JUST AS LIKELY TO ROB YOU AS HELP YOU!

    ANYONE LOOKING TO MOVE TO MONTANA BE AWARE… THE LOCAL WHITE TRASH HERE WILL ROB YOU!

    IT'S NOT A QUESTION OF IF… ONLY A QUESTION OF WHEN HERE IN MONTANA.

    AND TO ANYONE MOVING TO COLUMBIA FALLS MONTANA – DON'T IT'S THE GETTO OF THE FLATHEAD VALLEY MONTANA FILLED WITH LOCAL WHITE TRASH… BUYER BEWARE TO ANYONE MOVING HERE.

  • joey wang

    Hey, whats this all negative about USA? Having been to both countries, both which I like, want to look at the negatives of Canada? While looking at a property across from the police department in London Ont., Found the town so run down. Even had 2 drug treatment centers there in front of the police station. In Toronto had a gun put in my face and found a lot of bad areas that at night had shootings. Even in Chinatown had a kids head blown off while dinning, just couple of weeks ago. Look at the run down areas of Canada! See you can find it anywhere! Americans are nice and so are Canadians. Just wish you would attack others in the world as hard as you do America. As am American friend of mine says here, Canada is not a friend, just a good Neighbor. Have to say I see what he means.

    • Tryon

      Friend? Neighbour? Mister, we used to be your little brother, but now we've grown up and learned that most of big brother's stupendous accomplishments were just a bunch of bullying lies.

  • The Hard Reality

    And when America reaches that exploding point that the commonwealth countries pray for, The Americans will ride into Canada to take Canada back into their American arms and we'll all be screaming God Save The Queen as we get hoarded onto ships and tankers and sent back across that ocean we came from. Then they'll redevelop Canada back into their image, use all their natural resources that belong to them anyhow, regroup and become The America that the backward countries of Canadas occupiers fear so much. It's the hard pill we all know we have to swallow, but that's how it will be, de facto.

    • Tryon

      Don't forget our secret weapon: poutine! We'll clog all their arteries before they can yell medicare.

  • Friend

    Actually the USA spends more of it's GDP than most countries on education. Quality of education is not directly tied to amount of money spent. Your sentiment about spending on education may be genuine but it is not very well supported by the facts. Also, we test and give opportunities to all of our students instead of the select few who tested well enough to continue on the college track. That makes a big difference. Having said that, there is always room for a lot of improvement. Secondly, our current financial problems are due to the collapse of a debt bubble in a fractional reserve monetary/banking system. Times are good when the bubble is inflating and not so good when it's deflating. This is why the government encourages borrowing and lending. (student loans, cash for clunkers, mortgage deductions, etc.)

  • Innadiated

    [youtube eAaQNACwaLw http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eAaQNACwaLw youtube]

    [youtube Klqv9t1zVww http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Klqv9t1zVww youtube]

    And Canada.. we're next:
    [youtube H0rEYbwcy7k&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H0rEYbwcy7k&feature=related youtube]

  • Jack

    In the US and Canada, the only way back is to get stronger unions. An employee without a union and no health care is living in fear and desperation. We need to Increase minimum wage, have universal health care and secure pensions for everyone. You do that and America will rise again.

    • JustinWordswrth

      Is it possible that employers will hire fewer people at higher wages?

    • nedm

      And how exactly would this be paid? Secure pensions? How? Retirement is a false lie made up by people that are now dead.

      Minimum wage means higher inflation…go to mass and see how higher unemployment works as we have the health care plan before the rest of the country.

      Unions? O yes another boss. Unions eat their young. Unions don't always win contracts so then what.
      The real answer is to buy local and form coops as that means there is no division of labor and management

  • FedUp

    We need to be a third world country………..in government salaries.
    We need to be a third world country………..in overseas expenditures.

    Are these reduced police/fire departments putting forth self-help seminars on how to make your home and property less available to our third world youth's?

    Are the police department creating self defense/firearms training seminars? maybe if they started to help "prevent" criminals from having a field day the people they were hired to "protect and serve" would be better able to act as a solid community, standing fast against our homegrown third world element.

    Its better than getting this fear mongering drivel printed up. Poor overfed federal/state/union people. Boo Hoo.

  • fly-on-the-wall

    The US was so blinded and brainwashed by the radical rightwing, Bush et al and greedy corporate executives (who the Bush administration allowed and encouraged) no matter the public is now paying their price as they sail away in the sunset. Canada needs to keep a sharp eye on its rightwing lead govt (spending $20B in 72 hours) and its other spendings on their propoganda, warmongering & media machines so that we are not lead down the same dark hole.

    • nedm

      So how were these companies any different under Clinton?

      This isn't about left or right here…here's just a few common facts with history

      1) The US economy and to a lesser degree the rest of the western world was built post ww 2 by the buying power of baby boomers. Tens of millions of people at the same age at the same time created booms in baby food in the 50's, muscle cars in the mid 60's, education in the 70's, real estate in the 80's and investments in the 90's

      2) There is NO historical presedent for "retirement". Otto von Bismark made up this age 65 thing at a time when the average german only lived until the age of 45! Europe picked up on it and later the USA. How can we believe in retirement at 65 when the life expectancy has grown so much. There is no civilization on the planet that had "retirement" other than having children and having them take care of you when you became elderly. Romans, Goths, Incans, Phoenicans, Tartars, Hans, Hmoung, Nubian, Arabs…take your pick..NONE believed in retirement.

      3) The population growth of the USA is largely based on immigration…not native births. I'm 30..I grew up with roe vs wade…condoms came into schools by the time I graduated. Heck I don't even want kids if I can't find a decent job.

      4) When the USA sneezes the rest of the world catches a cold. When the slowdown started in 2008 we had oil drop nearly 75% within a half year. In short the USA was never a nation of savers while the rest of the world was never a nation of shoppers (probably because of a lack of banking insurance). While it is true there is a middle class in China and India they don't exactly have the same faith as in the USA. I've been to china and they trust foreigners more than they trust themselves…that's odd.

  • Phil

    Amazing that Ashtabula County Sheriff's department has 49 employees and only one patrol car. What is everyone else doing??

    • JustinWordswrth

      Walking.

  • Joe

    The public sector unions and beuracracies are killing us. The huge military is killing us. And our allegience to unfettered free trade and open borders and unlimited immigration is killing us.

  • Naomi

    Shucks, I thought deficits didn’t matter — The GOP’s mantra until a democrat took over the White House, then all of a sudden it now matters…..HMMMMMMM What am I missing here?

  • Mr Canada

    The US is slowly getting worse, year by year. It's moving so slowly, in fact, that each year they don't realizes anything is wrong, and still believe that they are as powerful as they ever were.

  • Back to the Future

    Yes, America will be a victim of her own success. And we all know when the USA gets sick, Canada catches a cold too.

    Hey Karnesy, you nailed it on the head.

  • Darden Cavalcade

    I'm not sure what "Third World" means to Savage or should mean to us.

    Is the Third World a place where there are people who are abjectly poor? Plenty of that everywhere, including the North America and Europe.

    Uneducated or under-educated people? A global problem/concern.

    Badly governed by stupid, corrupt officials? One finds that everywhere, including in the United States, and if what I read in Macleans is true…it is a problem in Canada, too.

    No National Health Service? Then, most of humanity is in the Third World.

    If you are a human being, you probably live in the Third World.

From Macleans