Flint on the Brink: Who Governs After Collapse—Broken Systems, Billion-Dollar Philanthropy, and Flint-First Leadership
Flint on the Brink is a clear-eyed examination of an American rust-belt city struggling to decide who controls its future.
In this episode, former Michigan prosecutor and legal educator Arthur Busch reads and expands on his essay Flint on the Brink: How Broken Systems, Billion-Dollar “Saviors,” and Flint-First Leadership Are Fighting for the City’s Future. The episode explores how decades of economic decline, segregation, and institutional failure have weakened Flint’s economy and its ability to govern itself and plan for what comes next.
But Flint’s story is not only one of collapse. It is also a story shaped by powerful outside actors, fparticularly large philanthropic institutions that have poured enormous sums of money into the city. While philanthropy has funded important programs, cultural institutions, and physical improvements, it has also created an unhealthy dependence on a small number of private funders to support basic city functions, including at times police and fire services. When grants substitute for sound taxation, budgeting, and public accountability, structural problems are masked rather than solved.
The episode examines how this pattern has influenced decision-making in Flint, encouraging leaders to ask what foundations will pay for instead of what residents truly need and how those priorities should be funded. It revisits major cautionary episodes such as AutoWorld and the downtown redevelopment that followed—projects driven by optimistic studies, philanthropic money, and outside vision, but which failed to deliver lasting economic transformation and permanently removed valuable land from the tax base.
At the same time, the episode acknowledges Flint’s real strengths: a deep sense of community, a lower cost of living, cultural institutions. These assets matter—but only if they are woven into a realistic, locally driven vision for the future.
Ultimately, Flint on the Brink argues that no foundation, state agency, or outside “savior” can substitute for accountable, Flint-first leadership. Public money and philanthropy can help repair damage and support good plans, but civic confidence and self-governance must come from within. The city’s future depends on leaders willing to level with residents about hard truths, right-size infrastructure, confront segregation, and insist that decisions affecting Flint are made by people answerable to Flint voters.
This episode is part of The Mitten Channel, a Michigan-based podcast and media network examining law, public policy, labor, and life in America’s industrial communities. A full transcript is available, and listeners are invited to explore the broader archive and subscribe for future episodes.
👉Subscribe to The Mitten Channel
Join us for the full experience. Subscribe to The Mitten Channel on Substack to receive our latest narrative essays, audio stories, and deep-dive reporting directly in your inbox.
Explore Our Series:
- Radio Free Flint: Narrative storytelling and community perspectives on industrial resilience.
- The Mitten Works: Essential history and analysis of labor and economic policy.
- Flint Justice: Critical insights into the legal and institutional challenges facing our state.
Visit our Mitten Channel website for our complete library of podcasts, videos, and articles.
The Mitten Channel is a production of Radio Free Flint Media, LLC. © 2026 All Rights Reserved.
Visit our website at www.radiofreeflint.media to subscribe to our free newsletter to receive our latest episodes.
00:00:00.160 --> 00:00:10.000
00:00:10.240 --> 00:00:23.120
00:00:23.359 --> 00:00:35.920
00:00:36.079 --> 00:00:45.520
00:00:45.759 --> 00:01:03.840
00:01:04.079 --> 00:01:14.640
00:01:14.799 --> 00:01:20.000
00:01:20.400 --> 00:01:27.200
00:01:27.359 --> 00:01:38.400
00:01:38.640 --> 00:01:46.719
00:01:47.040 --> 00:01:50.799
00:01:51.040 --> 00:02:05.599
00:02:05.760 --> 00:02:10.159
00:02:10.400 --> 00:02:13.599
00:02:13.840 --> 00:02:15.520
00:02:15.759 --> 00:02:22.400
00:02:22.719 --> 00:02:25.840
00:02:26.080 --> 00:02:48.800
00:02:49.039 --> 00:02:59.520
00:02:59.680 --> 00:03:06.560
00:03:06.960 --> 00:03:14.080
00:03:14.400 --> 00:03:22.960
00:03:23.199 --> 00:03:31.280
00:03:31.439 --> 00:03:38.800
00:03:38.960 --> 00:03:44.800
00:03:44.960 --> 00:03:59.680
00:03:59.919 --> 00:04:01.599
00:04:01.759 --> 00:04:07.759
00:04:07.919 --> 00:04:11.439
00:04:11.599 --> 00:04:16.480
00:04:16.720 --> 00:04:25.839
00:04:26.079 --> 00:04:32.399
00:04:32.639 --> 00:04:38.720
00:04:39.199 --> 00:04:42.800
00:04:42.959 --> 00:04:48.399
00:04:48.639 --> 00:05:00.319
00:05:00.480 --> 00:05:09.360
00:05:09.600 --> 00:05:14.800
00:05:15.040 --> 00:05:23.920
00:05:24.079 --> 00:05:30.160
00:05:30.319 --> 00:05:39.040
00:05:39.279 --> 00:05:45.360
00:05:45.600 --> 00:05:54.240
00:05:54.720 --> 00:06:01.360
00:06:01.600 --> 00:06:18.160
00:06:18.399 --> 00:06:46.560
00:06:46.800 --> 00:06:56.399
00:06:56.639 --> 00:07:06.959
00:07:07.120 --> 00:07:11.519
00:07:11.680 --> 00:07:23.519
00:07:23.759 --> 00:07:24.720
00:07:24.800 --> 00:07:26.160
00:07:26.240 --> 00:07:28.879
00:07:29.120 --> 00:07:52.160
00:07:52.399 --> 00:07:54.560
00:07:54.720 --> 00:08:03.120
00:08:03.279 --> 00:08:03.680
00:08:03.839 --> 00:08:04.480