.1 0 i 14e Sirriigan Daits Eighty-two years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan City council candidates speak out 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1973 Dial-a-solution to -mass transit Editor's Note: In advance of next Monday's city primary election, The Daily, as a public service, will be publishing statements from all City Council and Mayoral candidates, except for those unopposed. This is the first of a series. FIRST WARD Morris Thomas Democrat uncontested Andrei Joseph HRP uncontested (Stephen Raymond) HRP Has withdrawn from the race, but name is still on ballot. David Wiarda Republican uncontested SECOND WARD Carol Jones Democrat uncontested Clan Crawford Republican uncontested Lisa North HRP LISA NORTH, 20, is an urban studies ma- jor at the U of M. "The local Democratic Party has refused consistently to either oppose the business interests or support progresive action in city council. As co-chairperson of the BRP city council committee, I have had ample exposure to both types of action or in- action." "The Democrats opposed HRP ordin- ances for tenants rights. These would have been a step towards a housing situation responsive to tenants, not landlords. As police broke the picket lines at CPHA, Democrats fought against an anti-strike- breaking ordinance with teeth in it. Con- sumer protection (including unit pricing) legislation lies buried in a dead end com- mittee. The Democrats even opposed talk of community control of police. An im- portant part of my campaign will be a vig- orous attack on this record. As blatantly demonstrated on city council "progressive" Democrats consistently voted with "conser- vative" Republicans to stifle efforts for change. The Democratic record, or lack of it, shows the need for a strong third party." "THE PROCESS of building HRP as an alternative to the Democratic Party should continue. Part of this means keeping HRP a radical party. For a councilperson this means speaking out on the issues the other parties ignore. It means using campaigns and city council as platforms to raise de- mands for womens rights, community con- trol of public services, a steeply graduated income tax, and gay rights. Another part of building the party is making sure HRP is a grassroots organiza- tion. Too often in the Democratic and Re- publica parties discussion and decision mak- ing is restricted to a few leaders at the top. In contrast HRP meetings are open to diverse points of view. Anyone should be able to find out what is going on in the party." "There should be an emphasis on ex- panding the party's basically student con- stituency. The concerns of students go far beyond the boundaries of Ann Arbor. Prob- By JOHN PAPANEK ANN ARBOR is under siege. Not unlike most American cities, the post- war prosperity and mobility boom led increas- ing numbers of Ann Arbor citizens away from confining, inconvenient and slow public trans- portation to the fast, reliable, convenient and private automobile. ' Owning a car was a necessity, and in those days no one gave a thought to the serious problems an over-population of automobiles might someday cause. Now, it is cars, not people, that dominate most of our living space. Public transportation is stigmatized, left only for low income groups who cannot afford cars. More and more roads, parking structures, shopping centers, gas sta- tions and garish drive-in burger joints grow like a cancer along our roadways. The city itself has become a bastard-child of the automobile. Scarcely a step can be taken without "looking both ways;" the honk of the horn has replaced the song of the bird; and the smell of exhaust has all but obliterated the fragrance of the spring grass. The automobile is not about to become ob- solete. It remains the fastest and most conven- ient means of transportation available. But it delivers a few built-in catches: It is a major contributor to air and noise pollution; it extracts nearly 34 per cent of all the City's developed land for streets, roads, parking structures and support facilities; and a single automobile costs its owner between $1200 and $1500 a year to operate. WHILE THE OVERWHELMING emphasis for transportation in the city is on the automobile, what does this mean to those unable to support the expense of owning a car? Are the elderly expected to sit shut into their homes all day, having to walk up to a mile whenever they need a quart of milk? Do young people and children have to depend on their parents for transportation all the time? How much more land will fall to the bulldozers for more roads and parking structures? These problems have been tackled by the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (AATA), which has designed a public transportation plan that may be the salvation of the city. It is the AATA's belief that enormous com- munity benefits can be effected if the emphasis of Ann Arbor's public investment can be shifted away from concessions to the automobile, in- creasing the relative importance of public trans- portation. To effect this radical change, the AATA has striven for a system that most close- ly approaches the private automobile in terms of comfort, personal convenience, reliability and speed. Here is the system that the AATA proposes: -Door to door service virtually anywhere within city limits; -Service in response to a telephone call, com- pletely eliminating knowledge of timetables and schedules from the public burden; -Highly personalized, direct home-to-work and home-to-school and home-to-shopping a r e a service. -A ridership target doubling that carried by the existing bus service in the first year, with a fifth year target of diverting at least five per cent of all intra-city trips to public transporta- tion. -A standard $.25 fare for each trip, inde- pendent of transfers and travel distance. Re- duced rate monthly passes, family passes, sen- ion citizen passes, school children passes, and low income passes will make speedy door-to- door transportation anywhere in the city with- in the financial means of every resident. PRESENTLY THE AATA operates six bus lines from 6:45 a.m. to 6:15 p.m. Monday through Friday. Cash fare is $.35 for adults and $.20 for school children. The bus system car- John Pahanek is the most recent inductee to ried approximately 650,000 passengers in the 1971-72 fiscal year. The system's total operating cost was $450,000, with revenues accounting for approximately half the cost, and $234,000 being provided by the City's general fund. The present bus system is posting ridership gains of between 10 and 15 percent per year, but still represents only two per cent of total intra-city travel. The new system will operate from 6:30 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Monday through Friday; 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. The present system does not operate on weekends. The system will thrive on precise synchroni- zation of Dial-a-Ride minibusses, operating in 11 neighborhood zones plus a downtown loop, with express busses operating between the Dial- a-Ride zones.. A one-year field test of Dial-a-Ride, sup- ported by the State of Michigan Bureau of Transportation and Ford Motor Company's Transportation Research and Planning Office, yielded findings that prompted the AATA to endorse the proposed expanded system. According to the AATA's report of January 18, 1973, the Dial-a-Ride test showed: -Many Dial-a-Ride passengers were lured from their automobiles. According to an AATA survey taken in January and June, 1972, 50 per cent of the users were formerly automobile drivers or passengers, -Dial-a-Ride reached many passengers who did not formerly use public transit. -The average waiting time between tele- phone call and doorstep pickup was 10 minutes, and average riding time was 13 minutes. The most encouraging manifestation of a similar transit system is the Telebus system in Regina, Saskatchewan (population 150,000). In operation since the middle of 1971, Telebus has been totally absorbed into the community and maintains unqualified support from taxpayers and city government. BY FAR THE most appealing quality of Ann Arbor's proposed system is the $.25 fare, which as the AATA report points out, is low enough not to be an impediment for any population group to use the service, while high enough to place a value on the service in the minds of the users. Based on estimates culled from the one-year Dial-a-Ride test study, the AATA expects the 650,000 public transit passengers in 1971-72, to rise to 1.3 million in the first year of the new system's operation. The system will require a fleet of 15 express busses and 40 Dial-a-Ride vehicles, five of which will be specially equipped to accommodate handicapped passengers. To support ;the in- creased vehicle load, the city will need to construct a new 35,000 square foot storage gar- age, an enlarged office complex and mainten- ance facility. It is estimated that the operation will cost approximately $2 million yearly, with the bulk of the funding to be provided by a proposed city charter amendment calling for an additional 2.5 mill property tax. If passed by the voters in the City's April 2 election, taxpayers will be re- quired to pay an additional $2.50 per $1,000 as- sessed valuation. This tax would raise some $1.5 million, while the State Transportation package gasoline tax would add another $200,000, leaving approxi- mately $250,000 to be covered by revenue. WHEN IMPLEMENTED, intra-city travel would be this simple: A person desiring a bus calls a central dispatcher, who would send a Dial-a-Ride minibus to the person's front door within ten minutes. The driver would collect a $.25 cash fare, or punch a monthly pass. If the user's destination were in the same zone, he would be driven directly there. If he wished to travel to another zone, he would be taken to a transfer point where an express bus would be waiting to deliver him either to a major terminal point, say the University, St. Joseph's hospital, one of the high schools or shnning centers or he mn trnnfer to a lems like industrial pollution, and the un- equal distribution of wealth cannot be sol- ved at the local level. They require na- tional change." "HRP must reach out to other groups whose interests are not served by the status quo. Minorities and working people are of special importance. I want to raise issues that relate to their concerns." "Too often in the past HRP has acquired the image of a purely election oriented par- ty. It has seemed like the chief concern of the party was printing newspaper ads or burying people with a flood of leaflets. Yet just in Ann Arbor there has been a long history of local strikes, protests, and de- monstrations. As a councilperson, I will make working with such protesting groups my highest priority." "Injustices to women can best be fought by a strong women's movement. Real change for black people will come only if there is a strong black liberation move- ment. In fighting for rights, no group should depend upon the whims of city councils, even radical ones." Franklin Shoicet HRP AS AFORMER Michigan Democratic Party Political Reform Commission member and as a former Urban C o r p s Intern with Detroit Model Cities, I have seen the system's inability to handle the problems it has created. I am running to help change that system. We must give people an alternative that seeks to deal with their needs through such constructive proposals as have been initiat- ed by HRP this past year. I will not (as others have been doing) give city officials an excuse for inaction by emphasizing how little the city can do. Our most glaring problem is housing. My campaign has emphasized rent control, tenant-run code enforcement, and city pres- sure on the University to use its land and resources for more low cost housing, is- sues which others in HRP have virtually ig- nored (just like the Democrats and Re- publicans). Council has been unwilling to press for real answers to citizen complaints about the police, allowing policy to be made by back- room bureaucrats. I would work to get real, public answers to public inquiries and, as a first step to community control, would push for Council to publicity set law en- forcement priorities. Heroin addiction, in adition to wasting human life, has a surge of rip-offs as a by-product. Instead of $80,000 for police cruisers, Council should be funding re- habilitation efforts and supporting the de- criminalizing of heroin. I also emphasize using revenue sharing money to fund and plan neighborhood-con- trolled health and child care centers (in- cluding $50,000 for a free low cost abortion clinic); city pressure on the University to meet its child-care responsibilities to its student and employees; revamping the Hu- man Rights Department so that it will en- force laws to protect blacks, women, gay people, and students from discrimination; and support of HRP consumer-ecology pro- posals, such as the non-returnable contain- er ban and unit pricing. I am proud that my allegiance is to HRP, and not to some minute sub-group such as the Rainbow People's Party or the Chocolate Almond Caucus. Neither of these two factions has shown any ability to con- vince those who don't think like they do. In addition to the activities mentioned above, I was Community Organizing Di- rector for the local Vietnam Moratorium, a founding member of the white support coal- ition for BAM, coordinator of student sup- port for GM and 'U' worker's strikes, and an organizer for the Mayday demonstra- tions. Since September, 1971, I have been an HRP activist. I'm a law student, with a BA in Political Science. David Sinclair HRP GIVING PEOPLE direct input into de- cisions that affect their day-to-day lives is what HRP is supposed to be all about. But HRP has disenfranchised people's ideas with meetings conducted under torturous parliamentarian rules. I intend to (1) hold regular informal meetings in dormitories and neighborhood houses for people to discuss their ideas and find out what's going on; (2) make my phone number (761-1709) and my address (1520 Hill St.) available so people can bring their problems and suggestions to me; and (3) help set up public hearings and "com- mmnity control" commissions. Some people argue that City Council can't do anything. I don't believe that. The council spends millions of dollars, writes laws, controls the police, approves plastic- burger restaurants and does hundreds of other things. Most importantly, it has poli- tical clout that cannot be sneered at. Instead of wasting time with abstract rhetoric or symbolic tokenism, we need concrete proposals so we can take control of our own lives. ABORTION CLINICS - Women should pay what they can afford and receive the services they need at subsidized clinics. TENANTS RIGHTS - Exorbitant rents, rip-off damage deposits and landlod ne- glect can be fought by a tenants rights commission. CHILD CARE - Subsidized neighborhood facilities run by the children and parents involved. FOOD CO-OPS - Paying $1.50 for a doz- en apples will stop when the city subsidizes food cooperatives throughout the city. HEALTH CENTERS - Especially since St. Joseph's decision to flee, neighborhood centers must be built to handle basic health needs. POLICE CONTROL - Charges of police misconduct will be personally investigated until a community control board is estab- lished to police the police. PEOPLE'S RIGHTS - Information about everyone's legal rights will be made avail- able through media and meetings to mini- mize everyday illegal intimidation. MASS TRANSIT - Low-cost 24-hour bus service should help eliminate the threat of rape and the need for cars. RECYCLING WASTE-Subsidies to com- munity waste recycling will directly im- prove the ecology here. PROGRESSIVE HIRING - More 'peo- ple from oppressed groups must be hired at equal pay so the city can start relating to people who are exploited here every day. * * * David Sinclair has been a laborer, a college student, a draft resistor, a civil rights advocate, a legal defense fundraiser, a poet, an editor, and is now a fulltime community worker and organizer with the Rainbow People's Party. He is 27 years old, a graduate of Dartmouth College and a member of the Ann Arbor Cablecasting Commission. He was deemed "psychotically anti-authoritarian" by the U.S. Army. Alexander Stevenson HRP THIS PRIMARY election is important to Ann Arbor and especially to Students because the Human Rights Party has a chance to gain a majority of council votes in the April election. I wuld like to re- present the people of the second ward with one of those votes in City Council. I offer to the Human Rights Party my determina- tion to end once and for all the depend- ence of the workers movement on capital- istic alternatives. We want to construct a party that can bring to a succesful conclus- ion the revolutionary process in this coun- try. This can be done only through the reality of action, not through reformist changes in the system in an attempt to get certain candidates elected. Human Rights Party voters must nom- inate a candidate who can win in the April election. Vote for Alexander J. Stevenson and end misrepresentation in the political process. S. i Y 4 A. .9 Letters: To The Daily: falls in I AM WRITING in reply to a let- ed crit ter written by Margaret Miller, herself SGC Member, published Feb. 8. tive; r Ms. Miller makes a great show telligen of statistics to justify why a re- boorish cently vacated SGC seat should all who have been, and was, filled by no fidentica one other than a black female. Ms. females Miller believes that the application diction of racial and sexual criteria for by Ela choosing a new Council member selected reflected an "enlightened" and af- she is firmative" policy. SUCH I find this line of thinking pernic- and is9 ious. thing i I find this line of thinking per- justify3 nicious. raciala One of Ms. Miller's arguments is appear that SGC members should ideally ions. represent the student body. Indeed, I hav they should. But in back of the no- Leapha tion of representative government membe rests the idea that representatives views. should mirror the ideas and inter- represe ests of their constituency. To as- that I sert that representation should be I am n based upon solely physical criteria I onl of race or sex, regardless of a re- her "en presentatives' ideas or programs reconsi smacks of fascist corooratism. "ideal" In spite of Ms. Miller's protests I fear to the contrary, her line of reason- the tra ing is both racist and sexist. overly She appears to assume that a ness. T person, because of his or her race and so or sex (oddly enough, Ms. Miller wittingl did not mention religion or national traits. origin) has views that are stereo- - typically and exclusively black or .1:i- meti nrfamnla hic : SGC Council a stereotype?' to some arbitrarily contriv- erion and proves himself or to be liberal or conserva- adical or reactionary; in- t or dull; well-mannered or ; therefore and necessarily, share that criterion a r e al. In other words, all black who fall under SGC's juris- are "ideally" represented ine Leaphart, the recently d SGC member, because black. [AN ASSERTION would be patently absurd, but every- n Ms. Miller's attempt to Ms. Leaphart's selection on and sexual criteria w o u I d to bear out such conclus- 'e no complaints about Ms. rt's performance as an SGC r, as I know nothing of her For all I know, she might nt me perfectly, and for would be thankful, although neither black nor female. y hope that Ms. Miller and nlightened" compatriots will der their notions about representative government. that they have fallen 'nto p that awaits those who are zealous in their righteous- rhey have fought for so long fiercely that they have un- ly adopted their enemy's -Adam Simms Grad other side of the expressway. fated two incorrect facts concern- These are all part of the traas- ing Satyricon. Number one: the portation problems in Ann Arbor. Film was ordered in regular print, The Ecology Center is trying to received Cinema-scope print; the solve this problem and push for projectionist later said that was the alternate transportation systems in only type of print the film comes the city. Part of the April ballot in, and the projectionist was able is a bonding proposal concerning to contact one cinemascope lense. roads and bridge repairs. People Hence only one projector was at the Center have urged that this equipped for the showing, making bond issue be expanded to include for impossible quick reel-to-reel bike paths, ramps for wheel chairs, changeover. The second source of and overhead walkways for pedes- the problem was related to a time trians. At present there is no fund- Factor that we had no knowledge ing for this kind of project. of until the first showing; t h a t A public meeting has been called >eing United Artists incorrect state- a A ro pubicPeetng be calleda ment of time of showing for at the Ann Arbor Public Library Satyricon. Their time estimate: on Tuesday, February 13, at $ p.m' 120 min. when it actually was 20 The meeting will include a publiL min. longer. forum on all three issues, with re- presentatives of the city and the United Artists, when confronted Ann Arbor Transportation Author- with their mistake, conceded that ity participating.-they were in error, but it is doubt- T environmentali tful that any sort of reparations are The evrn nt mpcn-forthcoming. cluding both physical and economic oth rrmina. aspects, is going to be discussed at Another problem which may have this meeting. An inventory of group been less apparent to the audience, attitudes toward mass transporta- but nevertheless was very distres- tion systems will also be consider- sing to us, was the poor quality ed. We think it's important to sup- of sound during the 1st half of port the Ecology Center's efforts the movie. Investigation of t h e to solve Ann Arbor's transporta- equipment by the projectionist tion mess. Go to the meeting on Mackie, revealed the audio-ground Feb. 13. wires ,had been cut; hence poor quality sound. Sounds like some. -Jeanette Burns thing strange happening? Feb. S The problems that occurred were lessened by the patience and un- C11t derstanding of the audience and the surprising agility of Mike, the pro- To The Daily: jectionist, who was able to make TNT 1?Qn XTm n a m: Cis._ --o - -n , n aa-- :n AAA mission charge was not picked out of the sky; as if an additional $0.25 (compared to Cinema Guild) would make us rich. In fact, that is, dia- metrically opposed to our entire theory of showing low-cost movies here at the University. We have found that it takes money to run a consistant series of high cali- bre films. One week the co-op mak- es a profit, the next week it loses money. Cinema Guild, for instance, has been in bad financial trouble for a while. We first started as 'Collective Eye' film series in the peoples Ballroom, charging $0.50 or $0.75 donation and hall rental was free. The films rental ranged from $0-50 and cost of publicity subtracted from gross equaled no profit and sometimes losses. Mov- ing to the University meant audi- torium rental went up to $140 per night and the movie rental costs increased to $200 - $500. Satyricon costs for example were $500 in ad- vance vs. 60 per cent of gross, which ever is greater. As it was, we grossed $2000, 60 per cent of which goes to United Artists and a large percentage' to publicity leaving us with a total of about $440 to continue the film series. When you consider that it costs United Artists about $3.00 to ship a few reels of celluloid all over the country, $1.25 seems unjust, but not when you consider that to see the same film in a theatre charges range from $2-$3. We hope that this explanation kne hppn n pnir-atly r,.nnci%?to Al A I1