DETROIT 750 THE WISH N 17 TEVET 5754/DECEMBER 31, 1993 CLOSE UP New School Reform Package Will Affect Oakland County LESLEY PEARL STAFF WRITER eventy-five years ago this week Jacob Isaacson died and was buried in Detroit. Today his grave is unmarked and no family comes to visit. Yet Jacob Isaacson is anything but anonymous to the residents of an Arizona city. He came to New York with his parents, then se led in the rough-and-tumb e world of the West. He was, his father said, "fearless." He would have to be. In his life, Jacob Isaacson would not only found a town in an area where a man was likely to wake up face-to-face with an Apache, he would endure heartbreak from the woman he loved and spend much of his life in and out of mental institutions. Story on Page 38 harter schools, schools "This is much less scary than we en- of choice and vouchers visioned," Ms. Strauss said. "Schools of were the talk among the choice didn't pass. However, we need Jewish community since to continue to watch that religious in- Gov. John Engler vowed stitutions don't try to obtain a charter sweeping reforms in under a different name." Michigan's education Larry Imerman, president of the lo- system. cal chapter of the American Jewish Meeting a self-im- Committee and ad hoc member of the posed Dec. 31 deadline, school reform task force including the Gov. Engler and the Anti-Defamation League and the Michigan Legislature Jewish Community Council, said he is are congratulating themselves on their reasonably pleased with the plan but efforts. Their plan includes charter will continue to monitor government schools — public institutions run by pri- involvement in education. vate groups that serve as an alternative "The task force is not pleased about to traditional schools — but cross-district the inclusion of charter schools. choices and vouchers were dropped. However, we are satisfied that church- State Board of Education member state considerations were made part of Kathleen Strauss said the plan is more the legislation," Mr. Imerman said. promising than she expected, but is sure "That was our biggest concern. That, its final form will show modifications. and that we do not bleed funds from "Equity was never created over the the public schools." years. Lansing tinkered away with the Other aspects of the school reform existing plan for years and they'll tinker package, including funding questions with this one, too. Nothing is forever in which will go before voters, have left the Legislature," Ms. Strauss said. a lot of unanswered questions. She believes charter schools are less Birmingham School Board member of a threat than once imagined. The Judith Adler said of the hoopla, "It's all guidelines limit who can open an educa- very sketchy still how the individual tional institution and appear to provide districts will be affected." for the continued separation of church A March 15 ballot proposal asking and state. voters to decide how they will pay for Legal Aliens At Risk L the some $6 billion lost to schools through the elimination of property-tax funding has been nailed down. Voters can opt for a higher sales tax of 6 percent. An income tax increase SCHOOL page 8 nside BUSINESS KIMBERLY LIPTON STAFF WRITER ocal and national reset- tlement officials said this week they are cautious but not overly concerned about the impact of wel- fare reform on refugees from the former Soviet Union. Sources from the Clinton adminis- tration said earlier this month that a welfare task force had discussed cut- ting benefits to legal aliens in the United States to pay for welfare re- form. Details of -task force recommenda- tions are sketchy, and White House do- mestic policy advisers have said further talk about welfare benefits for non-cit- izens is premature. "The impact should be minimal," said Sandra Hyman, metropolitan Detroit's director of Refugee Services. "But it is hard to know how the plan will come down through the pipeline. `There are very few refugees who re- main on welfare," Ms. Hyman added. "About 1110th of 1 percent remain on Kathleen Strauss: State Board of Education member. welfare benefits after the first year. And that figure holds true nationally." Though no concrete numbers of the amount of former Soviet Jews living in the United States are available, a spokesman from the Hebrew Immigration Aid Society said the re- settlement organization has helped nearly 200,000 Soviet Jews who have come to the United States since 1987. Locally, the immigration figure since 1987 is estimated at 2,500. Neither the Council of Jewish Federations nor HIAS have released statements on the welfare discussions. But HIAS has teamed up with an um- brella group, Interaction, a New York- based coalition of voluntary social service and social welfare enterpris- es, to monitor progress of any pend- ing legislation. "Even though this may not impact us much, the bottom line is that this could send a message saying, We don't want refugees, '" Ms. Hyman said. "And this group of Soviets is highly educat- RISK page 10 Risk For Israel The New Israel Fund has different objectives. Page 22 Communal Commitment A Federation planner is moving east. Page 67 SPECIAL SECTION Health And Fitness How to stay fit and trim in '94. Center