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Detroit's Emergency Manager Meets With Creditors

LINDA WERTHEIMER, HOST:

The man with the power to shape Detroit's future sits down today with the city's creditors.

Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr will ask unions, retirees, and banks to take big losses on debt that Detroit just can not afford to pay.

But, as Michigan Radio's Sarah Cwiek reports, Orr is walking a fine line - using the threat of bankruptcy in order to avoid it.

SARAH CWIEK, BYLINE: Kevyn Orr laid out a dire, but now-familiar picture of Detroit's finances at a public meeting earlier this week. The city is technically insolvent already. It doesn't take in enough money to pay its current bills, much less the estimated $15 billion in long term debt on its books.

So Orr's main job as Detroit's state-appointed emergency manager is to wipe out as much of that debt as he can.

KEVYN ORR: This path will require painful sacrifices from all interested parties. This is not going to be easy. It took us a long time to get here, and to get us out of here is going to take some very difficult decision-making and agreements.

(SOUNDBITE OF PROTESTERS)

CWIEK: Protesters representing Detroit's workers and retirees also showed up at Orr's public meeting. They fear that Orr will end up paying off some of Detroit's creditors - big banks representing the city's bondholders - while workers and pensioners eat the biggest losses.

Those protesters will be at it again today, when Orr gathers all those creditors to lay out his go-forward plan for the city.

Orr spokesman Bill Nowling says the emergency manager is trying to treat everyone equally.

BILL NOWLING: We're going to be asking tough things of unions. We're going to be asking equally tough things of banks. And we want them to be in the same room, to understand this is not a business, this is a city.

CWIEK: A city in dire economic straits.

And it's Orr's job to convince those creditors he'll give them a better deal than a bankruptcy judge would.

For NPR News, I'm Sarah Cwiek in Detroit. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

Sarah Swiek