It did not bode well for labor and many other groups, including retirees of the City of Detroit. What began as an unpredictable journey before bankruptcy judge Steven Rhodes ended on a mixed note. The DIA was saved. Billions of dollars were shaved off Detroit’s debt leaving $1.5 billion to pay for city services. Thanks to a bipartisan “Grand Bargain” engineered by the bankruptcy mediator, federal chief judge Gerald Rosen, retirees had their pensions slashed a bit, but still received a significant percentage of their pensions.
After a 17-month battle with creditors, the city came out of bankruptcy. Detroit is back in the hands of its democratically elected leaders Mayor Mike Duggan, Council President Brenda Jones and the rest of the council members.
Detroit Bankruptcy

