Leonard Robinson checks a lighting fixture in west Detroit. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

DETROIT (AP) — Sam Walker jumps to attention when he hears noises at his Detroit home. But now he has an ally to help him see what’s happening outside: a bright streetlight that replaced one that was dim and barely effective.

A new light would draw a yawn in most cities, but it represents real progress in Detroit. The city is slowly restoring some services, improving others and paying vendors for the first time in months, even while attempting to turn itself around in a record-setting bankruptcy case that has reached a critical point.

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