MARCH 24 - 30. 1985 THE CITIZEN MlCoae.1 r ST. JOSEPH - Final al­ location of 19 federal revenue ring fund wer m de by the Berrien County Board of Com­ missioner Thur ay morning rch 21. The bo rd g ve half of the nton Harbor' Rec programs reques for 40 000 in federal revenu aring funds. The board pproved SlO,OOO for the P LS p gram, d another S10,000 for the Char e Gray Rec Center. The board also gave 60 000 to the county' 6 nior citizens centers; 20,000 to the Expand­ ed utrition Program; S20,000 to Planned Parenthood; 10000 to Community Action leg 1 aid: SIO 000 to th Housing Coun­ ling Center; and 60 000 to the Ju enile Center. The bo rd also approved S 170 000 in federal revenue ring fund for th Par and Recreation department. uch of that money will go to improvin Rockey G p County P r in Benton To ip. pre-application ' being bmitted to the Land and ater Conservation Fund, asking for 56,000 in federal matching funds for Roc y Gap. A pre­ pplication for 25,000 i being bmitted to the Michigan Co - tal an ment program, for fed r matching dollar also. u or or c The coun ty alloc ted the remainder of its 1,431 ,488 in federal revenue aring to: the county road commi ion, Gateway R habilitation, Family Crisis Center Volunteer ction Center, Th Link-Crisi Inter- ntion Center, 4-H Summer Program, ile Airport, handi­ cap ramp and h I for the county courthou the sheriff' marine division, with th r­ mainder going into th re eve fund. ting SaturdayjCo-ops­ Ch nee for better housing? Do co-operative hou ing hold an an er to improving Benton Harbor' housin stoc 1 Bern rd Schaefer of the ad­ i n Square Co-operative (MSC) of Grand Rapid thinks Co­ op housing might provide t city's re 'dents ith decent, afforab housing while giving them a chance at ownership. Th Citizens Coalition are bringing Schaefer to the city on Saturday, arch 30, . t 10:00 a.m. at Progre ive Bap- , Church, 245 Pi one St., Benton Harbor. The public is invited to thi meeting to hear bout cooperati s and their po . iIi­ ti s for the city, according to Rev. illiam oore, P tor of the Congregational Church and Ho ing Chairperson of the Citizens Coalition. Scha fer ill relate the sue- of dison Square Co- operati , Inc., If-help organization e tablished by re '­ dent of the ad' on-Hall area, in order to pur that neighbor­ hood's economic development. MSC want to educate the public abut the benefits of economic co-operation, nd de­ velop Model Co-operative which demonstr se how the pr tical application of the Co-operative principle can benefit con­ sumers, producers, and the general public. Ronni Clar is the Econom­ ic Development Chairperson, and Jame F.A. Turner' the Acting Chairperson of the Ben­ ton Harbor and Vicinity Citizens Coalition. trar's 0 lee. In numbers, Blac tudent enrollment went from 297 1 t year to 270 thi year. For Hispanics the drop wa from 88 to 87; A ians from 73 to 67; merican Indian from 33 to 27. By contrast, white enrollment ro from 5,887 to 6,363 , ce last year. To explain the drop, Dean of c demic Service, Robert Fletcher, said GVSC im t ttracting many tudents from th De roit area it once did. o. H gave a number of rea on for th t, Ii ting housing short­ ge, GVSC location, and in­ ere d financial ' d t other school. hip Gr t, accordin� to ie n. Ielsen added that th con­ tract was not put out for bids, becau professi onal contracts are required to b bidded out only once every 3 years. . A recommendation from the Planning commi ion, to rezone 158 Grand Bl d., from F­ heavy industry to A2-single residential, wa approved by the board. The owners of th property intend to build hou on the 'teo The pecial u permit re- que t from Highland Develop­ ment Corporation for 2015 Highland w approved. High­ land' Development wants to build a 40 unit, low-income nior housing center. ielsen . d the special u permi t d not change the zoning of th area, and gives Highland Development 1 year to construct f cilitie . 52 properties in Benton Township, acquired by the De- partment of tural Re ource for non-p yment of taxe , were bought by the township bo rd for S520. Tru tee ora Jeffer­ son said the properti s, and other not old in the 1 t e, would be put up for public bid . The board a 12 open entertainment. STATE By Harold Lester USKEGO t ndin room only crowd ed th commission chamger of th uskegon County Buildin the first of three t t hearing on Rep. Juani kin's Ho Bill 41 11. The Hou Labor Committ gathered testimony on or er' and the public's ' right t kno " about chemi d toxic b ance in the co - munity. Testimony rang d far d wide from busine , industry, public and private citizen . Hou Labor Committee members and local state repre­ ntatives Edgar A. Geerlings - orton Shores) and Mic ey Knight (R-Muskegon) heard the testimony led by the bill's sponsor, Juanita Watkins (D­ Detroit). Two other hearings are scheduled for Lansing and Detroit. Hou Bill 4111 would adopt tandards propo d by the Federal Occupational Safety Health Administration which are due to take effect in ovem­ ber. Supporters of the bill argued that OSHA tandards apply mainly to chemical manu­ factures and transporters and only apply to about a fourth of the wor force expo d to hazardous chemicals. Rep. atkins said her bill would expand the OSHA stan­ dard to provide citizens, police, firefighters and local health officials with information about chemicals in their communitie . It would prohibit employer from discriminating against workers who refu to handle containers not properly identi­ fied. She said the bill also allow ch mical manufactures to uppre ' legitimate trade cret ." "The information is not for everyone, and anyone ho ay it is, is using that smoke- creen", Rep. atkin said. ost of tho t tifying were in favor of the bill. A few testified in favor of aiting for OSHA stan­ dards to take effect and eing how they work. They included u ke on Area Chamber of Comm rce Pre 'dent Tom orri and Daniel Girvin, an environ­ mental and en rgy engineer from the Sealed Power Co. Girvin The board 0 dopted bud­ get amendment to the i 984- 85 budget, which end rch 31. The board dded SIO,OOO to the building fund, S2,000 to the treetlighting fund, $4,000 to road maintainance, and 15,000 to the police fund. Tre urer Jame Boothby explained that the township is coming clo to going over budget for this fiscal year. Boothby said the dollars were tac ed on to in ure that the to ip did not go over budget, making the audit for 86-85 ea ier for the uditors. Th bo rd approved t 0 audit contracts with Bri 01, Lei ring, Kerkner '" Company. One udit will be for the 15 or 16 perate township fund, The first budget meeting ill ccording to Boothby, and th be reb 30, 1 p.m. at Hull other will be for the township School. Community De elopment Bloc Grand Valley minori y enroll ment dro s 1WP - As of ednesday, March 20, Ben­ ton Township I functioning charter township. Unanimou pproval by the township board t it arch 19 meeting of a re lution to create a charter to nship has made that a reality. Supervisor Larry ielsen and other members explained that b a it done by board re lution, the board cannot r e without general election. "Had e done this by referendum," . lsen id, ''we ould ha a limit to which e could have raised millage ith­ out approv , but we did it by re lution, so e can't ' ALLENDALE - Minority enrollment t Grand Vall y State College h d clin d while enrollment ' up 6.6 overall and bite enrol1m nt ' up 8 per­ cent. GV Pre ident Arend D. Lubb r announced the college hopes to correct the ituation by improving student rvice and adding more Blac faculty mber. inority decline wer cro th board. De line by group ere: Black down 9 percent; Hispanic, 1 percent; ian , percent: and ativ meri- , 18 perc nt; ccordin to fi ure rele d by th regis- id Sealed Power already had a training porgram for 80 to o empl ees who are routine­ ly in direc ontact with chemi­ cal . Sheri 'Aspey Pre ident of the tJ. �gon Labor Council FL-CIO, te tified in favor of th bill an . 0 did Don Jac on Pre 'dent' of A Local 539 t C Textron. Jack id CWC had m de gre t 'de in envirom ntal concern in the days his father had oiked there when "you cou d only see four or five feet' front of you," J c on d the problem of contaminat on remained.' y do you ha e to have a major dis ter or catastrople before pa eng a hou bill like 41111" Jackson ed. Rep. Geerlings as ed Jackson hi opinion of the attitude of labor and management at C Textron today about health and safety. , ithout a third party like MIOSHA (the ichigan em of OSHA), we'ed be set bac 20 year or more, Jac on aid. ith that I don't thin any­ thing would happen." George ikoriu, Safety Chairman for the D troit Fire­ fighter A ociation, related two incidents in which firefighters responded to emergencies in. factorie , without any idea of what they ere g tting into. In one incident, 10 firefighters were injured by FCBS leading from transformer . Rick ewberry of the e t Michigan Environmental Action Council, said 19 other states have alre dy p d right to kno legislation that exceed the oon-to-be- dopted federal and rd. UA International Repre n­ tative Richard onSC3 said that worker "a guinea pigs and in another five years you're going to e re ult of test that are going on right now." He ex­ pre d further concern that non-legitimate trade crets might be claimed, but Hou Bill 4111 h a fe ture that would permit authorized wor er repre n tative to chal­ lenge trade cret claims, I If you would li e to testify or have more informati n call S ott T bey t 17 355: 5070 Lansin i.