INSIDE WASHINGTON Soviet Jewry Activists In D.C. Want Extension Of Deadline • JAMES D.BESSER Washington Correspondent ewish groups here con- tinue the delicate pro- cess of responding to new administration policies on the admission of Soviet Jews to this country. "We have a big job to do in terms of educating people about all these changes," said Shoshana Cardin, chairman of the National Conference on Soviet Jewry, at the conclusion of NCSJ's Leadership Assembly last week. Despite a grudging accep- tance of the fact that refugee ceilings are not likely to be raised, Soviet Jewry ac- tivists are expressing con- cerns that the new pro- cedures will not be ready to be implemented by Oct. 1, the start of the new fiscal year. Some of the proposed changes include processing visas in Moscow no longer allowing those traveling on Israeli visas to use them to enter the United States. Last week, 11 senators cir- culated a letter urging the j Looking to a one-of.a-kind design or personal service? We put the "custom" in customer! administration to postpone the deadline — an effort most observers expect to fail. Action continued on a number of other fronts. Last week, Canada's minister of Shoshana Cardin: "Big job to do." immigration was in town, talking about the idea of "burden sharing" under which Canada, • as well as countries like Australia, would encourage some Soviet Jews to come to their countries. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, was informally floating a proposal to de- velop a loan program to help finance applicants for un- funded refugee slots, and Rep. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., was talking about provisions that would allow Soviet Jews who can afford to pay their own way to enter the United States as refugees. Last week, a bill by Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., that would facilitate the granting of refugee status for Soviet Jews and Viet- namese was successfully attached to the foreign operations bill. The amend- ment also contained re- quirements for a com- prehensive study by the Comptroller General on the new procedures. And last week, the Voice of America began letting Soviet Jews know the details of the new procedures — or at least those details that have been worked out. "We're trying to present the most up- to- date • infor- mation," said a VOA spokesman. "This is ob- viously very important to people who hope to leave." Federation Says HUD Formulas Are Outdated tau Fashion in Action THE STUDIO SOUTHFIELD Applegate Square Northwestern at Inkster 356.6848 BIRMINGHAM 351 S. Woodward Ave. 540-0418 28 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1989 The mushrooming scandal at the Department of Hous- ing and Development (HUD) is taking its toll on the Jewish elderly. B'nai B'rith International and several federations are working to shake loose funds slated for Section 202 hous- ing programs for the low- income elderly. Both groups use money from the program to build subsidized housing. "Because of the investiga- tions at HUD, everything is being slowed down," said Susan Banes Harris, Washington representative for the New York federa- tions. "And because of efforts at cost containment, they're still looking at the building costs of many years ago. And their fair-market rent formulas make it less attractive for non-profit groups to get involved." Harris and representatives of B'nai B'rith are working to attach language to the HUD appropriations bill that would free up some of the money and update the rent formulas. They are get- ting a boost from Sen. Bar- bara Mikulski, D-Md., Rep. Bill Green, R-N.Y. and Rep. Chuck Schumer, D-N. Y. "In some of these projects, we have waiting lists that are eight times our capacities," Harris said. "This HUD scandal has come at a very bad time for us." Jewish Elderly Sound Off On Catastrophic Care Former presidential con- _ tender Bruce Babbitt called it "the gift that blew up under the Christmas tree." Jewish activists here may not appreciate Babbitt's religious allusions, but they agree that last year's catastrophic health in- surance bill has produced one of the most explosive reactions from constituents in recent memory. The program provides benefits for some 33 million elderly and disabled Medicare recipients. But el- derly taxpayers were • stung when they discovered the ex- tent of the new surtax that funded the program. "We heard from our members in droves," said the Washington represen- tative of one major Jewish organization. "It really put us on the spot; we feel strongly that this is a critically important pro- gram, and we recognize the realities that the money has to come from somewhere. But we also have sympathy for our members, who are really worked up about this surtax." House and Senate offices heard from constituents in record numbers. Currently, Congress is wrestling with several proposals to alter the plan. F - V-