nw 3fpigan Daitm Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Mining interests imperil MEPA Thursday, October 16, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 I 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 No womenl in Bo territory IN TERMS OF sports, the Univer- sity's Athletic Department may have the latest in just about every- thing. But in terms of morality, com- mon sense, and intelligence, Bo's boys et al. are somewhere north of the Ice Age. With blatant disregard for the facts of life, they have traditionally treated women as unfortunate mutants to. be ignored in the hopes that they will someday disappear. Women's teams have been neglected, and typical of their mentality is the exclusion of women's facilities in the University's Multi-Sports Building. But it's the little things that really hurt most of all - those gnawing, ridiculous, be- So lets speculate what would hap- pen if women were allowed to pollute the minds of our precious players and rub shoulders with, them on their next charter flight. "Darling," she cooed as she gently caressed the inside of the player's thigh. "Tell me all you know about the strategies in the next game." The devil in disguise. Wouldn't you know that a women - damn them anyway - would be a spy for the other team? SHE MILKS THE unsuspecting, melting player for all he is worth and then adjourns to the powder room. All eyes follow her as she struts her stuff to the back of the plane. Suddenly Bo rises to his feet to dis- cuss some of the intricacies for the coming game. "Smith," he says. "What are we going to do when we get out on that field?" "'TITS," says Smith with a glazed, lascivious stare. Bo looks aghast and tries to gloss over Smith's re- sponse. "Jones," he calls to a player in the back of the plane. "Tell Smith here what we are going to do?" "TITS," says Jones as the magazine on his lap suddenly changes po- sition. Bo surveys the clan only to find them all in the same stupor. Sud- dehly the toilet flushes in the Ladies Room. "I can't stand it," screams one of the players. "I have to get some." fHe rnhes to the emergency exit and with Herculean strength, rip s the door from its hinges. The next day you read about it in the newsnapers: Entire Wolverine Team Perishes in Plane Wreck. Thank you Athletic Denartment for preserving the glory and goodness of our football team. And by the way, thanks for reminding us about the power of the "weaker" sex. Editorial Staff GORDON ATCHESON CHERYL PILATE Co-Editors-in-Chief DAVID BLOMQUIST................Arts Editor BARBARA CORNELL .. Sunday Magazine Editor PAUL HASKINS.............Editorial Director JOSEPHINE MARCOTTY Sunday Magazine Editor SARA RIMER ......... Executive Editor STEPHEN SELST.................. City Editor JEFF SORENSON .. .. Managing Editor MARY LONG . .,.. Sunday Magazine Editor STAFF WRITERS: Susan Ades, Tom Allen, Glen Allerhand, Ellen Bresow, Mary Beth Dillon, Ted Evenoff, Jim Finklestein, Elaine Fletch- er, Stephen Hersh, Debra Hurwitz, Lois Joi- movich, Doe Kralik, Jay Levin, Andy Lilly, Ann Marie Lipinski, George Lobsenz, Pauline Lubens, Rob Meachum, Robert Miller, Jim Nicoll, Cathy Reutter, Jeff Ristine, Tim Schick, Katherine Spelman, Steve Stojic, Jim Tobin. Bill Turque, Jim valk, David wein- berg, Sue Wilhelm. David Whiting, Margaret Yao. Photography Staff KEN FINK Chief Photographer STEVE KAGAN ..............Staff Photographer PAULINE LUBENS ..........Staff Photographer By MARC BASSON A MAJOR TEST seems to be shaping up in the Michigan House between conservationists and industrialists over a bill de- signed to ease environmental re- strictions on iron and copper mining in the Upper Peninsula. After passing the Senate by a vote of 21 to 13 last year, Sen- ate Bill 1003 was rejected by the House, 29 to 68. However, fol- lowing a long established system. of legislative courtesy, the House agreed to reconsider the matter when it reconvened this term. Under the terms of the mo- tion to reconsider, the re-vote can be postponed for only one day at a time, and so the House has been making such one day postponements every day since it began its new session Monday evening. Several sources have indicated that the House lead- ership plans to stop postponing the bill and to bring it up for a vote this afternoon. House spon- sor Dominic Jacobetti (D-Ne- gaunee) insists, however, that the bill will not be brought to a vote before Tuesday, October 21, since he will be meeting with the Upper Peninsula Legislative Council over the weekend to dis- cuss the bill. In any event, the final vote is near since the House leadership is unlikely to allow SB 1003 to clog up the legislature's action on conserva- tion bills much longer. TO UNDERSTAND SB 1003, we must look back at the history of the MEPA. The act sprung from a lawsuit brought by a con- servationist group in the late h"'d}:;; g;":"g mvr."vr" :{y ;;;;s}%"{.:;: hopes to create 2,000 new jobs. JACOBETTI has consistently alleged that companies like Cleveland Cliffs Iron Company have been unable to obtain loans because of the risk of costly de- lays imposed by the MEPA. However, according to James R. Gillen, Vice President and Associate General Counsel of The Prudential Insurance Com- pany of America, which is now negotiating a loan with Cleve- land Cliffs, "Prudential was un- aware of the existence of this bill and had not ever discussed the issues involved with Cleve- land Cliffs." Along the same economic lines, Jacobetti explains, "Sim- ple arithmetic shows that, with an ever present danger of clos- ing 12 per cent of our steel in- dustry production through the potential shutdown of Reserve Mining, plus the nine per cent loss of available Venezuelan iron ore pellets, the American steel industry is faced with the po- "Over 3000 people Bo low the belt incidents that really por- tray the Department's disregard for Women. And one such policy is the immortal "Tits Off" ruling. Women are not al.- lowed to travel with the Michigan football team because it will "dis- tract" the players. It's enough to make you ralph your morning coffee. DISTRACTION? Bolderdash! The players settle down in the plush seats of their chartered plane to tell dirty jokes, pour through the latest pages of Playboy, Penthouses, Oui and Orgasm, and scope the leggy stewardesses as they scurry to serve them. But would any extra travelling tits on the plane be enough to drive the Mighty Men of Michigan to "dis- traction?" Or do you mean to tell us that the football players take a tour of duty in the local monestary before they are allowed to hit the Tartan Turf. Unlikely. TODAY'S STAFF News: David 'Garfinkel, Lois Josimo- vich, Jo Marcotty, Jim Nicoll, Sara Rimer, Jeff Sorensen, Bill Turque Editorial Page: Marc Basson, Paul Haskins, Debra Hurwitz, Tom Kett- ler, Marc Letica, Robert Miller, Judy Nudelman Arts Page: Chris Kochmanski Photo Technician: Ken Fink in the Upper P sula hold jobs en ing or carrying ob water pollution tes alone. By des ing the MEPA, betti hopes to c 2.000 new jobs." sixties to stop thirty-fiv from using DDT and die' insecticides. The suit thrown oit of court grounds that there exi legal basis for such a la Appalled at this legal v conservationists asked Pr Josenh Sax of the Unive Michigan Law School tc for them a law powerful to force industrial com with an environmental Thus, the MEPA wast eive the citizen the right for nrotection of, hise ment. Representative Jacobe gues that the MEPA is undesirable piece of tion in its present form, in favor of the extremi of environmentalists, wh been using it in the cou very dilatory and irresp manner." He has also claimedt 1003 is necessary to allow tries to exnand andT more jobs. Professor Sa tered that the act inr prevents industries from new personnel and exp but simply makes suret it without polluting. F more, Sax continues,t quirements of the MEPA themselves create jobs in servance and enforcem fact, over 3,000 people Upper Peninsula hold j forcing or carrying outt ter pollution statutes al destroying the MEPA, J ut the tential 21 per cent shortage of available iron ore pellets that statn.- make up the steel industry's present rate of production. stroy- Therefore, you can readily see that the expansion of the mining Jaco. industry in the Upper Peninsula is not just to the advantage of a 'reate few mining companies, but has a direct bearing on the future economy and defense position of our nation as a result of the nec- essary required production of K, r our mines to feed the steel in- dustry." According to Dr. Sax, Jacobet- e cities ti's logic is like that of a kid Idrin as who says to his father, 'Dad, I t was saved five cents by walking on the home from schoolinstead of tak- sted no ing the bus,' and the father re- aw suit. plies, 'Well, tomorrow save $2.35 oid, the by walking home instead of tak- rofessor ing a taxi." rsity of o draft IN ONE LAST attemptto con- enough .fuse the issue and justify his apliance stand on SB 1003, Representa- code. tive Jacobetti suggests that, if born to the MEPA is not repealed, "the tto sue State of Michigan will be sued environ- for aiding and abetting people to obtain money under false pre- etti ar- tenses, because it has issued "a very worthless permits to companies leeisla- who in turn have obtained funds biased from lendors; and permits is- st type sued have been found to be sub- ho have ject to suit and, therefore, incur rts in a- costly delays." Taken aback by ponsible this argument when he first read it, Sax finally commented, that SB "It's the first time such an ar- t indus- gument has ever been made. To produce the best of my knowledge, it is x coun- utterly without basis in law and no way there's no validity in it." a hiring Thus, although J a c o b e t t i ,anding, makes a lot of noises about they do "streamlining the system" and Further- speeding up the permit granting the re- process, neither of which is the k will in basic thrust of SB 1003, his ba- n its ob- sic argument seems to boil lent. In down to the overriding idea that in the the mining industries want SB obs en- 1003 and the State of Michigan the wa- needs their money, so we had one. By damn well better do what they acobetti say. en in- iforc- Sax Mining companies have been trying to get at the rich deposits of iron and copper ore in the Upper Peninsula for years, but their operations in Michigan have been impeded by the ne- cessity of preparing elaborate impact reports and permit ap- plications, dealing with lawsuits designed to stop construction of polluting facilities, and taking elaborate precautions to prevent pollution. IN ORDER to justify their po- sition, supporters have present- ed an elaborate scenario of en- vironmentalists wildly initiating suits against all industrial activ- ities to drive the companies out of Michigan. Mike Prendergast, Director of Public Relations for Cleveland Cliffs Iron Mining Company, ex- plains, "Our only objection to the looseness of the current En- vironmental ProtectionAct is that for any reason you could come in, and you may not be an expert, maybe the company fired your grandfather or some- thing (This is really a far out case, but vengeance is a funny thing) and with all' of the per- mits issued and all of the regu- lations met, you could hold up construction and add five hun- dred to eight hundred million dollars in additional costs." However, a continuing study by the University of Michigan Law School on suits brought un- der the MEPA since it was passed demonstrates that the law was in no way being abused " and that some very important issues were dealt with through these suits, and dealt with, ef- fectively." REPRESENTATIVE Dan An- gell, (R-Battle Creek) stated in this connection, "Thebaverage court case length has been less than six months. I would, there- fore, say the track record for resolution of lawsuits has not demonstrated an undue delay or unnecessary harassment of in- d"stry. There is simply no com- pelling reason to water down a good law." Professor Sax charges that the advocates of SB 1003, both in and out of the legislature, had more ulterior motives for intro- ducing SB 1003 than simply try- ing to eliminate the rare harass- ment suit. "The recession," Sax explains, "was seen as an op- portunity by some industrialists to mount an attack on the sta- tute while public attention had been diverted. It was a great opportunity for a few good whacks on the environmental laws." Representative Howard Wolpe (D-Kalamazoo), s i m i 1 a r I y viewed SB 1003 as a test case for industry's attempts to over- ride environmental protection laws. "The bill remains a clas- sic case of special-interest leg- islation. It is a mining exemp- tion bill, and now that the door has been opened, we will be be- sieged by similar efforts of oth- er industries to build in their own exemptions and to eventual- ly gut the Environmental Pro- tection Act." GIVEN WHAT Representative Thomas Holcomb (D-Lansing) termed "a bill clearly designed to accommodate special inter- ests," the next logical question is the authorship of the bill. Just who is responsible for SB 1003? Jacobetti originally claimed that the New Yorkbased firms responsible for loaning money to the mining companies had re- quested such a bill. However, Prudential obviously knows nothing about the bill at all. Ja- cobetti also claims, "Nobody speaks for me. My interest in the bill is to get some jobs in this state." Thomas McGinty, senior vice president for finance at Cleve- land Cliffs, was quoted in the Marquette Mining Journal as saying, "It's purely a CCI bill. We drafted it, and we are the ones who are pushing for it." However, PR Director Mike Prendergast denies that McGin- ty ever said this and asserts that McGinty was somehow misquoted. (Wes Thorp, the man who wrote the article, re- portedly replied to allegations of misquoting, "Maybe so, but that's the way I reard it.") Prendergast insists "We didn't have a damn thing to do with the perpetration or the writing other than the fact that we would support such a move." McGINTY IS mysteriously out of town and cannot be reached until October 20. Senator Joseph Mack (D-Ironwood), who ori- ginally introduced SB 1003 into the Senate last year, is also mysteriouslytunavailable. His office in East Lansing reports that he will also be unreachable until October 20. Representative Jacobetti is also insisting that the House of Representatives wait until after October 20 before acting on SB 1003. Of course, the fact that all three men seem fixated on Oc- tober 20 and the fact that all three have at one time or anoth- er identified themselves as the motivating force behind SB 1003 may be meaningless, but they do seem suggestive of some- thing. Attorney Jim Clancy, who serves as counsel for Cleveland Cliffs and the Michigan Iron Mining Association (MIMA), re- vealed that he had written most of the text of SB 1003 that was originally submitted to the Sen- ate and many of the amend- ments to SB 1003 passed in the Senate. However, he insisted that his function as attorney for Cleveland Cliffs was not rele- vant to his participation in writing the bill. Clancy claims, that he became involved only through MIMA, (of which Cleve- land Cliffs is a member) and his only comment on MIMA's tie to SB 1003 was "We were in it be- cause we're so well aware of it." Clancy also claims that he has totally lost touch with the bill since it went to the, House of Representatives. REGARDLESS of who provid- ed the initial impetus for SB 1003, it seems clear that Sena- tor Mack and Representative Jacobetti, both committee chairmen, provided quite a bit of impetus themselves once the bill came to the attention of their respective houses. Profes- sor Sax saw SB 1003 as a test as- to "whether the iron mining industry with the support of two of the most powerful legislators can muscle this bill through." One legislative source re- mittee or made any deal." As the activities of Senator Mack, Democratic Floor Leader William Fitzgerald had com- mented, "This is the worst bill I ever voted for, but I needed Mack's vote on the teacher strike and political reform bills." Jacobetti replied, "That's not ise." In fact, the whole history of "If citizens are no longer allowed to sue under the MEPA, a company could con- ceivably turn its Upper Peninsiula propertyin 'to one gigantic strip mine, and no one could do anything to stop it." SB 1003 has been replete with mysterious "compromises" hid- den by the fact that no public hearings on SB 1003 were ever held. Representative David Hol- lister (D-Lansing), recounted, "This bill was introduced June 30, and was sent to the Senate Conservation C o m m i t t e e, chaired by the author of the bill. Hearings were not held. The bill was round-robined out of com- mittee and placed on the Sen- ate calendar in the rush of bud- get bills, the teacher strike leg- islation, the Business privilege tax, and campaign reform legis- lation. It has not received the scrutiny and review required. Now, (Aug. 14), after one short month and some legislative foot- work, parliamentary maneuver- ing and horse trading, we are faced with blatant special inter- est legislation." According to Professor Sax, this disorganized "legislature off the cuff and on the run" has resulted in "a parody of statu- tory drafting" with all of its vague amendments and unclear phrases. Sax termed the Gin- grass amendment, which now allows citizens their right to sue but prevents the judge from act- ing on the suit until the entire case is settled several years la- ter after all possible appeals are exhausted, "a travesty of the English language" and explod- ed, "So what do they intend to do? Who the hell knows? We haven't had any hearings, any memoranda. Nobody's thought about it." OVER THE YEARS, mining industries have been steadily pushing to get themselves ex- empted from all of the environ- mental statutes to maximize their profits. They have almost succeeded. Orly the Michigan Environmental Protection Act still stands intact. As Professor Sax put it, "Of all the . god- damned laws on the books, this is the one that works and works well. If SB 1003 is passed, there- fore, mining companie will no longer have to follow environ- mental restrictions and guide- lines. For example, land recla- mation is now dictated only by the MEPA. If citizens are no longer permitted to sue under the MEPA, a company could conceivably turn its Upper Pen- insula property into a gigantic strip mine, and no one could do anything to stop it. Representative Tom Ander- son's aide, Doug Reece claims, "In all honesty, I think we've got the bill defeated and I think the sponsors realize that now. When it gets down to the nitty gritty of the vote, I think the 'Nos' will prevail." ON THE OTHER hand, Rep- resentative Jacobetti insists, "If he's got the bill defeated, all well and good, but he's not de- feating me. I don't quit after this one; this is just the first round. If we are defeated, I'll be back till justice prevails." Pressed for a prediction on the fate of SB 103, Jacobetti re- snonded, "It's my intention that we're going to win. We'll have enough votes to pass it as amended." In the end, only the final House vote will determine whether SB 1003 succeeds or fails. We can only wait and watch and hope. Marc Basson is a member of the Editorial Page staff. Jabobetti SWMAl OW LIFGGIHLI ONp\ y SGC Notes Make administration listen. vealed, "A lot of legislators, be- cause of the timing of the thing, with appropriations bills coming up and bills they wanted out of committee and vote trading (es- pecially in the Senate) were mostly saying that 1003 was not a bad bill because they ddin't want to get Jacobetti and Mack mad. In reality, the majority of the House out of their own con- sciences could not vote for it, but they preferred to put off trouble by stalling to get power- ful people off their backs and to keep them from getting mad at the wrong times." This House hypocrisy led Ja- cobetti, fiveminutes before the vote, to brag that he had 56 votes, and it led the conserva- tionists to expect a close vote, by a two or three vote margin. "When the 68 no votes were counted out, Tom Anderson (Chairman of the House Con- servation Committee and oneof the original sponsors of the MEPA) literally fell out of his chair." REPRESENTATIVE Jacob- etti, of course, denies all allega- tions thathe applied any sort of pressure. "I in no way twist- ed arms or applied pressure from the Appropriations Com- By DEBRA GOODMAN T HAVE ALWAYS felt that the long-term goal of Student Gov- ernment Council (SGC) and any student government or organiza- tion should be the participation of students in every aspect of the decision-making process at this University. Today, we are forced to organize, rally, dem- onstrate, petition, strike and oth- erwise pressure the University for even the right to be taken seriously. And, as in the case of the BAM strike, even successful student struggles are easily overcome by administration if students do not maintain the high level of statewide organiza- tion and pressure it took to draw attention to these issues. It isn't fun having to spend our entire University careers convincing students on this cam- pus that it is once again time to put all our energies into pro- LS&A IS THE largest college in this University, and repre- sents the most advanced form of administrative control we have. Just this Tuesday, The Daily criticized this Executive Com- mittee for its decision not to ap- prove the Ann Arbor Teach-In mini-course after it had been approved by the curriculum committee of LS&A. In this col- lege, the Executive Committee reviews all committee decisions in closed session. No one can speak at these committee meet- ings about an issue directly con- cerning himself, and the agenda and minutes of these meetings (and even their location) are closely guarded secrets. I asked that a letter from me to the Ex- ecutive Committee be included in this agenda and was informed that nothing could be brought up before this committee without Dean Frye's approval. Last year, the Regents direct- ed Vice President Henry John- son to form a Commission for. the Study of Student Govern- ment. The Regents will be dis- cussing their report at their meeting today, and voting upon it next month. The CSSG report can be brok- en down into three basic propos- als. The first would create a new central student government that would be more representa- tive and more effective. The second would create a non-vot- ing ex-officio student position on the Board of Regents. Thethird would allow students to sit on the Executive Boards of schools and colleges - something that is forbidden by the present by. laws. THE CSSG REPORT does not assure us full representation in the decision-making process, but it does create that potential. W ,'re nr~anizina around student Contact your reps- Sen. Phillip Hart (Dem), 253 Russell Bldg., Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. Sen. Robert Griffin (Rep), 353 Russell Bldg., Capitol Hill, Wncin tnn in'rflS15_ ry g -ggg i i -"~'i:iii , m