"EGG "-CITING HUNTIN IIIGHLA I) P R -Hundred'ofyeut e eout to p r'tlelpate in t e offici I E ter E II u t, April 13, po . red by t e City of lJighlund P rk. M yor M rt a G. Scott long it the Easter Bunny greeted children between t e age . 3-12. The child collectin the most Ea uer E s wu pre rented, sp ciul Ea ter �ift. The contrihutions of cundy und Ea ster e were de by the unders/Country Home Il kerles of lIi�hulund I' rk. May 6-11, 1 ICHIGAN CITIZ P 7 4-H makes Wayne appointment EAST LANSI 0, ie .- - Michigan State University Cooperative Extension Service ha made two Wayn County appointmen . Ron Brown has been appointed director of the Westside 4-H Center in Detroit and Tyrone Winfrey, youth ag n1. Brown i re ponsible for youth development programs at the center, at 10501 Oran­ gclawn, which provides oppor­ tunities for young people to develop leadership potential, citizenship responsibility and productive capacity. Program will u e community volunteer adult and older youth leaders. Brown, who joined the Wayne County Extension taIT March 26, h worked for t pa t 11 years with community and youth development pr grams in Detroit. Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. He received hi' bachelor's degree in p ychology in 1973 from Oakland Univer­ sity. Winfrey has primary respon­ sibility for the youth component of the Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program (EFNEP). He will implement thi program through the estab­ Iis�ment, development and maintenance of 4-H youth cen rs, comrriuniti of Wayne County. A 19 2 gr duate of th U�i�ersity of Wyoming, Wanlrey worked in Detroit a a counselor for th Com­ preh. nsiv Youth Training and Community lnvolvement Pro­ gram sin 19 5. . City to host spring cl an-up HIGHLAND PARK - Join Mayor G. Scott in th 1990 City­ Wid Clean-Up 0 Friday, M Y 4 & 11, 1990 and S turd y, M Y 5 12, 1990. The Clean-up . sch duled from 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. All residents and b in owner. are encour ed to "take prid "and help de n-up just in time for the Michig 0 Week Parad , May 19, 1990. For more inf rmati n call 869-5 2. Healthcare, Education have paid prison bill, GOP charge . .. By D n· I y LA ' I '0 -- Budget pre surcs , t, te Medi . id f nding are the result of Michigan' pri on build-up, according to Republican Hou e Leader Paul Hillcgonds R-Hulland. You can't add' over a half­ billion dollars in that area without taking from others," HilJegonds said. "It really has diverted re sources a ay from aid to chooi. and uni vet. itic , and the other major part of the budget today, health care," Medicaid is funded through the states to provide health care for indigent person. The federal government reimbur: es about 55 P .rccnt of th . � tate' c Sl . State f unding for correction. has gone up over 4 percent since 1979, while the budget for ocial . erviccs ha increa cd 86 percent. The governor's prison expansion has added 17 pri ODS and 12,3000 cell since .1984. More than 3,300 additional cell �II be added before the expan­ sion program ends in 1991. State Budget Director Shel­ by Solomon deni d that the cor­ rection budget increase is diverting re ources from other programs. He aid social ser­ vice is receiving the largest ap­ propriation in the 1990 budget. DUC 10 RECEIVED the highest increa e in the 1990 budget, going from 2.6 billion to 2.9 billion, an increa c of 11.7 perc nt, while c rrections received an incre e of .5 per­ cent. ocial service remained reI tiv ly t bl , increasingly only 0.6 percent in the 1990 budget. Over the pa t' 11 years, however, corrections funding went from $146 million to $TIO million, an incrca e of 428 per­ cent. During that same period, ocial . ervicc ro from $1.2 billion to $2.3 billion, an in­ crease of 86 percent. Solomon blamed budget constraints on legislative over­ pending, not lac of r ds. "The problem that we're fceling i a spending problem. the legislators are enacting policies that are costing us more than we have," Solomon said. Th t's not true, said David Wiener, aide to Rep. David Hollister, D-Lansing, chairman of the House Appropriatio s cial services subcommittee. "How he can make a claim that we're overspending is unbeliev­ able to me." Wiener noted tha the House had rejected Blanchard's Heal­ thy Start specifically because it contained to provisions to raise revenue to support the program. HEALTHY START WAS intended to provide healt coverage to the children oflow­ income famil!es without private insurance who do no qualify (i r Medicaid .. "In the case of Medicaid you can't make the argument that we have a spending problem," Wiener said. "We are paying 78 cents for every dollar in hospital co ts. . The Michigan Hospital As­ dation, together with other hcalt h care organizations, is suing the state over Medicaid reimbur cm e nt, claiming Michi an's policic. ct iUegaJly low rates. The state budge includes pr opuscd cost-cutting measures for Medicaid which would: - Reduce the incentive paid to hospitals that tre t large . numbers of Medicaid patients. - Establish competitive bid- ding for Medicaid contracts. .. - Link reimbursements paid for hospital improvemen to hospital occupancy, - Place acap on reimburse­ ments for medical education programs at teaching hospitals. - Reduce the rates paid to long-term care units attached to hospitals to the level of other nursing homes. - Place a cap on the daily rates paid to psychiatric hospi­ tals. Salomo defended cost cut- ling ures, . g there a lot of competition for s e dollars. "If we tried to meet every need nd evcry concern that was out there, our budget would be many times larger than it is now," he said. DID YOU ... that for rea ns health officials do oot understand, there h been a 50% increase in thm de ths among Blacks over the last IX year. I'