The Detroit city government that emergency manager Kevyn Orr envisions over the next decade will be a far more advanced operation, no longer limping along with outdated computers and obsolete technology that undercuts everything from accurate tax collection to real-time analysis of crime trends.
City restructuring consultant Charles Moore, who took a deep look at the city’s information technology troubles, told the Detroit Free Press "You’d be hard-pressed to find another municipality of Detroit’s size that operates with these sorts of archaic processes and systems.”