DON’T TAKE THE DEAL! Check us out on Nebula: https://go.nebula.tv/climatetown Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ClimateTown sUbScRiBe FoR mOrE ViDeOs: https:/...
How the fuck can any city sell its streets? Fuck sounds like something out of Robo Cop except its supposed to be Detroit. If this can’t be reversed by the voters and get normalized then other city’s and states will soon follow.
Think of the hellscape we will live in then when all roads and highways are own by Wallstreet.
A big chunk of French equivalent of interstates are leased to private companies that maintain them. People pay tolls every 150 miles or so and the money goes directly to the companies.
Up until a few years ago, Illinois, and especially Chicago, had politicians and leaders who thought themselves untouchable, and acted that way.
This caused a lot of problems for Illinois, including the pension issue, political appointments, funding, selling off things to private businesses for kickbacks, etc.
Luckily the corrupt politicians also were sloppy enough to get caught regularly. Just looks at how many of the recent governors were convicted felons.
Michael Madigan and the Daily family were the poster children for corruption in Illinois. Since Democrats were the majority party, they kept control over the government for a very long time. Eventually, Madigan overplayed his hand, but the damage was done.
The state is finally starting to recover from the corruption, and Pritzker is actually doing a surprisingly good job as Governor, but the previous administrations were so damn evil.
Watch the video. They didn’t literally sell their streets, they sold the parking meters, but certain clauses in the contract means the city has to pay up anytime they want to do anything that might affect revenue to those meters so it suddenly becomes much more expensive to do anything different with that space.
Tldr via notegpt
🔥 Chicago summers are hotter than the surface of the sun and winters are freezing, but for a few days in fall, it’s tolerable.
💰 In 2008, Chicago sold its streets to Morgan Stanley and investors for $1.57 billion.
🅿️ Chicago leased its 36,000 parking meters to Morgan Stanley until 2084.
🚗 Chicago citizens must pay a private company every time they park at a meter.
🏈 Chicago’s control over its streets was given up, impacting parades, road work, and meter management.
💸 Chicago paid Morgan Stanley $31.5 million in 2012 for lost revenue due to various reasons.
📉 The deal undervalued the parking meters, with Morgan Stanley making a killing while Chicago lost out.
How the fuck can any city sell its streets? Fuck sounds like something out of Robo Cop except its supposed to be Detroit. If this can’t be reversed by the voters and get normalized then other city’s and states will soon follow.
Think of the hellscape we will live in then when all roads and highways are own by Wallstreet.
A big chunk of French equivalent of interstates are leased to private companies that maintain them. People pay tolls every 150 miles or so and the money goes directly to the companies.
Up until a few years ago, Illinois, and especially Chicago, had politicians and leaders who thought themselves untouchable, and acted that way.
This caused a lot of problems for Illinois, including the pension issue, political appointments, funding, selling off things to private businesses for kickbacks, etc.
Luckily the corrupt politicians also were sloppy enough to get caught regularly. Just looks at how many of the recent governors were convicted felons.
Michael Madigan and the Daily family were the poster children for corruption in Illinois. Since Democrats were the majority party, they kept control over the government for a very long time. Eventually, Madigan overplayed his hand, but the damage was done.
The state is finally starting to recover from the corruption, and Pritzker is actually doing a surprisingly good job as Governor, but the previous administrations were so damn evil.
Watch the video. They didn’t literally sell their streets, they sold the parking meters, but certain clauses in the contract means the city has to pay up anytime they want to do anything that might affect revenue to those meters so it suddenly becomes much more expensive to do anything different with that space.
Not the best way to diversify urban mobility out of automobile supremacy