During the meeting’s public-comment period, six speakers — three in person and three online — urged council action and asked for follow-up on property, pension and oversight issues.
Mia Anderson followed up on an earlier inquiry about a right-of-first-refusal transaction in which the city building authority would spend $1.4 million to acquire 144 county properties and appeared to transfer many of those properties to the land bank. Anderson said she was concerned about the land bank’s management and recent staff reductions that she said have affected service and oversight.
“I have a lot of concerns about the checks and savings account,” Anderson said, urging clearer accountability for how the properties are handled and asking for more information on the right-of-first-refusal process. City staff said someone from the administration would follow up.
Another in-person commenter, a retired Detroit firefighter, identified himself as Dalton Michael and described his role recruiting local citizens for the fire department; he noted that only about 21% of fire-department employees live in Detroit and said that the citizen-advisory board could address recruitment and oversight goals.
Online callers raised related issues. William M. Davis urged greater equity for general-fund retirees who suffered pension reductions during earlier budget adjustments; Betty A. Varner, president of the DeSoto Ellsworth Block Association, asked the council to waive a $1,500 land-use hearing fee for neighborhood nonprofits working to beautify vacant lots.
Council staff committed to connect with callers and provide follow-up information or memos as appropriate.