Detroit is at a political impasse that could lead to a financial collapse next month.
Now, one state legislator is saying Lansing should consider “all its options”—including possibly dissolving the city as a municipality.
The idea of dissolving Detroit—and effectively merging it with Wayne County—has popped up occasionally in some business and political circles recently.
But mid-Michigan senator Rick Jones is the first official to publicly discuss that as an option.
Jones says Detroit’s local leaders just aren’t dealing with the city's fiscal problems—and having the state’s biggest city file for municipal bankruptcy would be “horrible.”
“I think everything is on the table,” Jones said. “ I would be willing to consider dissolving the city, if that’s what it took.
“One of the options could be actually dissolving the city of Detroit, and putting all of their functions back into Wayne County. That is possible.”
Still, Jones acknowledges this merger scenario is “unlikely.” He says the prevailing discussion in Lansing is about bankruptcy versus some kind of state intervention.
Lawmakers in Lansing are also considering passing a revised version of the emergency manager law voters overturned in November.
Detroit faces the possibility of running out of cash in mid-December.