Fresh from Detroit, Sid Edwards dreams big on Baton Rouge blight. But others are wary.

DETROIT — On Halloween weekend in 2010, Detroit burned.

Vacant properties — Victorian homes with boarded windows, doors hanging loose and no one inside to protect them — became tinderboxes as arsonists moved through abandoned neighborhoods on the city’s infamous annual “Devil’s Night.” By Monday morning, Detroit had counted 169 fires, most of them in long-abandoned houses.

Wracked by economic decline, population collapse and on the brink of bankruptcy, the city was overwhelmed, leading an exhausted fire chief to say: “Let them burn.”…

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