Tuesday, March 5, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five ANN ARBOR LANDLORD: Evading the Rules at Albert Terrace (Continued from Page 1) parking requirements collapsed. Without all the required parking,, Stegeman could not occupy Albert Terrace without violating the law. No one seems to know how or why the building and safety de- partment made the error. City Attorney Peter Forsythe main- tains the dispute rose over a mat- ter. of interpreting "vague word- ing" in the zoning code. But Chief i Engineer Charles Blackmer, of the building and safety department, disagrees. "Our department was clearly in error," he says. "There is no ques- tion the plan should not have been approved." So, reminded by Blackmer in a letter, "The required parking of the building must be provided prior to occupancy," Stegeman petition- ed the city to rezone the R2B par- cel, to permit parking for his apartments In the meantime, Stegeman wanted to begin moving tenants into Albert Terrace. With a good portion of his parking forbidden, however, he could not satisfy' parking requirements,. and there- fore could not legally occupy the apartments. ("Be assured that I have no de- * sire to occupy without your in- spection and issuance of a cer- tificate," he wrote Blackmer.) To ease matters, the building and safety department offered to let Stegeman occupy Albert Ter- race prematurely, provided he would first submit a "performance bond" promising to complete all required parking by June, 1968. If he failed to meet the deadline Stegeman would forfeit $7,500 to the city, and the city would build the parking lots itself. But Blackmer stressed in a phone conversation the bond had to come first. Without the bond on file or completion of all the park- ing, Blackmer said, Stegeman was forbidden to occupy any apart- ments. Stegeman lauded the depart- ment for the new policy ("Believe me it is a real step forward and I think your deparment deserves every commendation for coming up with it," he wrote to Blackmer Aug. 21) and immediately moved tenants into Albert Terrace. He posted no bonds. Meanwhile by Aug. 28, inspec- tion records indicate, Stegeman had already oceupied 32 of his 62 apartments-before the build- ing and safety department had in- spected and approved them. Section 121.1 of the building code states, "No building shall be used or occupied in whole or in part until the certification of use and occupancy shall have been is- sued." According to Blackmer, building and safety inspected the 32 apart- ments August 29, after they had already been occupied. Ordinance Chapter 98, Section 123.3 states, any person who vio- lates the code "shall, upon con- viction, be punished by a fine of not more than five hundred dol- lars or by imprisonment not to ex- ceed ninety days, or by both." The building and safety depart- ment pressed no charges against Stegeman, and Stegeman paid no' fine. (Stegeman fared 'far better this time than he had a year before. City records indicate that on Dec. 30, 1966 Ann Arbor's municipal court convicted and fined him $350 for occupying 14 apartments at 525 Walnut street prior to inspec- tion and- approval. Stegeman pleaded guilty.) Why didn't the building and safety department press charge against 'Stegeman? City Attorney Forsythe says, "I have no comment. My recollection is that the tenants were not moved in until after the units were in- spected." Blackmer, however, recalls the incident and has the facts record- ed in his files. "It wasn't worth the trouble to fine the 32 units individually," he declares. In any event, tenants were al- ready occupying the 32 units. There were still 30 empty apart- ments left, however, so to prevent further illegal occupancy, accord- ing to Blackmer, he told Stege- man not to move tenants into any more units. Stegeman then occupied another five apartments. The units had not been inspected or approved. This time the building and safe- ty department did file charges against Stegeman for occupancy' before inspection. On Oct. 18, the court fined him $250. ("There should be some kind of way to stop this thing," Blackmer says. "I suppose we should ask for more severe fines.") By mid-September, however, city, officials were still squabbling over the zoning matter, Albert Ter- race still did not have its required parking, and Stegeman had not filed the bond as promised. complaining about holes in bed- room walls where windows should have been, missing air-condition- ers, missing washing machines, bare electrical outlets and 40° temperatures inside the building (the heating didn't work until October)-but basically city in- spectors say they found Stegeman's posh apartments solidly con- structed. Blackmer did find one discre- pancy, however. $tegeman's zoning compliance clearly specified 62 one-bedroom apartments, which under city code require 49,600 square feet of land. 'With 51,034 square feet under Albert Terrace,j Stegeman's plans surpassed the furnish his apartments as the per- mit intended. Today most of Albert Terrace's. apartments still have two bed-' rooms, say Albert Terrace resi- dents. By Nov., 1967, with a number of inspections and violations to its record, Albert Terrace was still very much a live issue at the De- partment of Building and Safety Engineering. Despite Blackmer's (and Forsythe's) repeated warn-I ings and Stegeman's repeated promises, the performance bond had still not been filed. And the required parking had not been provided.I When on Nov. 27, therefore. Stegeman's finally delivered a check for $7,500, the building and safety department hoped the Al- bert Terrace case was coming to a close. It was not. When the city treas- urer tried to cash the check, he: discovered the check was drawn on a closed account. The city returned the check to Stegeman, demanding a certified See RESTRICTIONS, Page 8 Mechanical Engineers & Electronics Engineers Campus Interviews Wed., March 6 For further information about these and other openings send your inquiries to Personnel Department: P.O. 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Blackmer wrote Stegeman a firm When Blackmer inspected the letter Sept. 13: "Since we have not received the bond: occupancy apartments for the first time Aug. of the building cannot be ap- 29, however, he found not one- proved . . . we are withdrawing bedroom but two-bedroom apart- permission to occupy any units ments. Sixty-two two-bedroom that are not already occupied." apartments require 62,000 square For emphasis and qualification, feet of land, according to the Blackmer wrote Stegeman ,again building code. two days later: "Permission to Blackmer protested, and Stege- occupy those units (not yet oc- man promptly promised to re- cupied) is being withdrawn until a performance bond is on file or all the required parking is pro- vided and approved. Blackmer also wrote a memo to Forsythe to keep him up to date. "He (Stegeman) has done a good job of putting us off," it said. "This is a compliment to him, not a criticism of us." So Sept. 19, Stegeman received a letter from Forsythe. "Without the bond we must take all the nec- essary stept to prevent (occupancy of the remaining units)," warned Forsythe. "The performance bond, V which I had been led to believe had been posted, was a major con- si'deration in permitting any oc- cupancy without the required parking." Stegeman posted no bond. . Aside from the occupancy vio- lations, bond issue, and zoning dispute, building and safety de- partment actually found little "at Albert Terrace to complain about. It is true student tenants such as J. Randall Birndorf, '69, wrote angry letters to the department K U.S. citizenship Required An Equal Opportunity Employer f y ... r II U There Are Two Sides To Every Coin. Everything Has Its Advantages and Disadvantages. On the plus side, University Housing can save you valuable time by taking care of your meals and dirty dishes, your soiled bed linens, and the like. Facilities for your personal laundry are close at hand. There are lounges, game rooms,' TV sets, and snack bars where you can socialize, and quiet places where you can study. There are people around with whom to do things. There are BUY NOW! A 1968 MICHIGANENSIAN 420 MAYNARD