DETROIT Successful '91 Allied Campaign Will Leave Local Agencies Short ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor T he Detroit Jewish community's achiev- ement in raising near- ly $45 million in one year for the Allied Jewish Campaign and Operation Exodus will not be shared in full by local Jewish agencies. The Jewish Welfare Fed- eration recipient agencies were warned three weeks ago that an Allied Jewish Campaign shortfall would force them to decrease their 1991-1992 budget requests by 5 percent from this year's budgets. At Monday's Campaign closing celebration at the Jewish Community Center, Federation officials an- nounced that last spring's Operation Exodus for Soviet Jewish resettlement in Israel had raised $21.2 mill- ion. They said the Allied Jewish Campaign had raised $23.6 million to date and still has 2,243 persons to Campaign Names Pappas Co-Chair Norman Pappas, associate chairman of the 1991 Allied Jewish Campaign, will serve with Lawrence Jackier as chairman of the '92 Cam- paign. Mr. Pappas has served on Federation's leadership de- Norman Pappas velopment committee and on United Jewish Charities' professional advisory com- mittee. Mr. Jackier will con- tinue for a second year as chairman of the Campaign. Joseph Orley was honored at Monday evening's Cam- paign closing for his two years as Campaign chair- man. contact who contributed $3.4 million last year. But even with those extra dollars, the Campaign falls short of the record $27.5 million collected last year and the $28.5 million goal established in November by the Federation board. The $28.5 million was the minimum necessary, Fed- eration officials said at the time, to give local agencies their first modest increase in two years. Robert Aronson, Federa- tion executive vice presi- dent, said Tuesday that $28.5 million "was a real goal." Not meeting it "will mean cutbacks in all our allocations to one degree or another." Mr. Aronson said he is meeting with agency presi- dents and executives in the next two weeks to discuss the situation. With the for- mal conclusion of the Cam- paign, the budgeting process now begins. Final ad- justments are made in June and the Federation board will vote on the allocations in July, Mr. Aronson said. "I don't know where we can go" for additional funds, he said. "It has been a difficult year for United Jewish Charities as well." UJC manages the Jewish community's endowment funds, which total in excess of $80 million. Mr. Aronson believes Fed- eration will increase funding for family assistance — food, rent payments and other basic survival programs — Community Trip To Israel Is Firm Jewish Welfare Federation President Mark Schlussel made a strong appeal Mon- day evening in support of the Jewish Welfare Federation - Jewish Community Council trip to Israel April 21. More than 30 Detroiters have signed up for the non- fundraising mission to Israel. Mr. Schlussel and JCCouncil President Paul D. Borman are leading the mis- sion. Mr. Schlussel told the Campaign closing that the phrase used at the end of the Passover Seder — L'shana haba'a Yerushalyim (next year in Jerusalem) — must now beome L'shana hazot Yerushalyim (this year in Jerusalem). with supplemental requests going to UJC. Mark Schlussel, Federa- tion president, sees the prob- lem of local versus Israel needs as "the ultimate dilemma" of the Jewish community. Federation usually distributes nearly 60 percent of Campaign funds to Israel and overseas com- munities through the Jewish Agency and the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. The remaining 40 percent is used for local and national agencies. "My own sense is now is not the time to reevaluate the formula," Mr. Schlussel said. "Everyone has said that resettling the Soviet Jews in Israel is the priority. And I have often said that this is one of the unique moments in history. "This resettlement is an opportunity — even with tremendous sacrifice — that must be a priority for the American Jewish commun- ity. "But at the same time," Mr. Schlussel said, "the local community is very im- portant. The preservation of our vitality is of utmost im- portance to me." Local agency executives were not surprised by the shortfall, but are worried about its effect. Alan Good- man, executive director of Jewish Family Service, ex- pects to make program cuts to balance the budget of JFS and the Resettlement Ser- vice. "Coupled with the reces- sion, this has created many Mark Schlussel: A major dilemma. unusual pressures," Mr. Goodman said. "The Jewish poor are being hit significantly by state cuts and now the Jewish corn- munity's safety net is being stretched even further. I don't know if we will be able to bring these people up to poverty level." Mr. Goodman said the Federation has been respon- sive to the problem, "but there is a limit to the resources." Albert Ascher, executive director of Jewish Voca- tional Service, said his agen- cy's service committee will examine counseling and placement services at JVS' Southfield offices. These programs, funded by the Allied Jewish Campaign, in- clude vocational counseling, job placement, Project Outreach for inner-city residents and the Jewish Educational Loan Service, he said. "We will try to minimize the disruption of services," Mr. Ascher said. "We have already looked at staff overhead and we banned staff travel for part of the year. It looks now that we'll have to look at services." Mr. Ascher said cuts will be especially hard because funding from the Allied Jew- ish Campaign was not in- creased to local agencies last year. In effect, the agencies will be forced to cut 5 per- cent from 1990 budgets. Other local agencies that receive some funding from the Allied Jewish Campaign include Hebrew Free Loan, Federation Apartments, Jewish Home for Aged, Jew- ish House of Shelter, Jewish Information Service, Agency for Jewish Education, Sinai Hospital, five Jewish day schools, three state Hillel foundations, the Jewish Community Center, Jewish Community Council, and the Jewish Welfare Federation. Several dozen national agency recipients of Cam- paign funds will also be af- fected. ❑ JHA Postpones May 16 Gala KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer S aying it is premature to showcase its planned state-of-the- art West Bloomfield facility, the Jewish Home For Aged has postponed its May 16 dinner aimed at launching a capital fund-raising cam- paign. "It is not good timing," said JHA Executive Vice President Alan Funk. "There is no reason for the Jewish Home For Aged to start a fund-raising cam- paign at a time when it is difficult to raise money, and when there is a crisis in the Gulf, the Soviet situation and a recession." No date has been schedul- ed, but officials for the Home said the "Gala Celebration of Life" would take place during the spring of 1992. Plans to begin a capital campaign for the new facili- ty began after the Michigan Department of Public Health granted a long- awaited certificate of need last May for Borman Hall in Detroit to move into a pro- posed 212-bed facility at the Jewish Community Campus. But a separate certificate of need to move the 100-bed Prentis Manor from Southfield to the same facili- ty is still being contested in court. This has set back plans for a timely move, Mr. Funk said. JHA officials had hoped to break ground for the new facility by 1994, but various setbacks — including the pending legal problem over the CON —have forced offi- cials to look at 1995. Current plans call for a 312-bed Jewish Home For Aged in West Bloomfield to be located next to Fleischman Residence. The gala dinner will showcase the Home's ac- tivities and feature architec- tural renderings for the new building. ❑ Tub rIPTIZCIIT IPIAIICW KIPWC 44