Firm rejects By SARA ANSPACH "RIGHT NOW we think of television A Colorado firm planning topurchase as entertainment. In the next decade Ann Arbor's bankrupt cable television it's going to be a lot more important station indicated it is no longer in- than that," said White. terested after the cable television or- Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward), said dinance revision it had helped prepare the city would have been giving the was defeated by a 6-5 vote at Monday's buyer of the cable television system an City Council meeting. important monopoly. "In return, you The proposed revision would have (the City) ought to get some rights to reduced the franchise fee for the cable regulate the system and the rates," she television station, and would have said. required the new buyer to provide only Mayor Louis Belcher and four two public access channels instead of Republican City Councilmen voted in the four the original ordinance favor of the revision. Belcher said he requires. had planned to support the ordinance IN ADDITION, the proposed or- amendment at the first hearing and dinance stated that fable television then iron out "small differences" with rates would not be regulated by the city the Denver company before the second until over 90 per cent of the residents hearing. were subscribers. COUNCILMEMBER Edward Hood opposing the amendment were four (F-Fourth Ward) described the coun- Democratic and two Republican City cil's action Monday as "very foolish." Councilmembers. Many were influen- A Cablecasting commissioner for three ced by local attorney Elmer White, who years, Hood called Ann Arbor's Cable is involved currently in a court case on System a "super loser," and said the whether cable television should be city needs a good company to make defined and regulated as a public cable television worthwhile for Ann Ar- utility. bor. White argues that the cable television Hood also said he regreted the Den- franchise is too valuable for the city to ver company's withdrawal from the give away its right to regulate rates and deal becausae they had offered to pay said he felt that the proposed revision the $390,000 tax bill the bankrupt station would not have required the purchaser left. "There just aren't that many to serve the public, people willing to come to Ann Arbor and Vote on discharge of abortion bill delayed The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 9, 1979-Page 5 cable TV deal buy the cable television station," he had recommended the revised ordinan- said. ce because of recent deregulation Mark Ouimet, chairman of the policy of the Federal Communications Cablecasting Commission declined to Commission and in order to attract comment, except to say that he was stable potential buyers of the cable "disappointed" the council had rejec- system to Ann Arbor. ted the amendment. The Commission .1 1 Daily Phone Numbers: Billing-764-0550 Circulation-764-0558 Classifieds-764-0557 Display-764-0554 News and Happenings-764-0552 Sports-764-0562 I wr wr Arm.. « . mm Mm.. Irv By BETH PERSKY The vote on forcefully discharging, from a state Senate committee a bill to cut Medicaid funding for abortions, scheduled to be taken up by the Senate yesterday, was postponed until sometime next week, according to aides to Sen. Edward Pierce (D-Ann Arbor). Discussion on the controversial Wetlands bill in the state Senate lasted until 3 a.m. yesterday, and so yester- day's debate on the abortion issue was cancelled. The schedule was set back several days, and yesterday's calendar became today's, said Terry Redford, an aide to Pierce. "WE'VE HEARD that they are going to postpone it (the bill) for a week," ad- ded Redford. "If this is true, I can guess they're postponing it because they don't have the vote." The discharge motion, made by Sen. Ed Fredricks (R-Holland), was post- poned by Sen. David Piawecki (D- Dearborn Heights), who schedules bills to be presented to the Senate. Senate Bill 157, now in the Senate Committee on Health and Social Ser- vices, which is chaired by Pierce, requires 20 senators to vote for removal (discharge) from committee. The bill has been in committee only six weeks, and many bills take up to a few months to leave the committee stage. THE BILL WAS originally sponsored by 22 senators, but spokespersons for pro-choice groups said they believe recent lobbying aimed at persuading senators to vote negatively on discharge of the bill from committee may have caused senators to recon- sider. "We feel that it (the lobbying effort) has had an impact because we were able to get word out very quickly," said Pat Leuzzy of the Michigan Women's Commission in Lansing. Supporting both the bill and the discharge of the bill from committee are not necessarily synonymous. "MANY SENATORS feel it's just too soon to discharge (the bill from com- mittee)." said Leuzzy. Ellen Leonard, President of the Washtenaw County Abortion Rights Coalition, said that Pierce's tactic was to gain the support of the other legislators, especially majority leader William Faust (D-Ypsilanti), because a vote to discharge a bill from committee against a chairman's will is "likea slap in the face to a chairman - because you can't do your job right," said Leonard. Co-sponsor of the bill, Sen. John Welborn, (R-Kalamazoo), disagrees that the bill should stay in committee, claiming that Pierce made a commit- ment to put the bill out of committee. "If we bring it out before the full Senate, the Senate will make a full determination - if the committee calls for a hearing, there will be opportunity for input." IF THE BILL stays in committee, it may die in committee and never be brought before the full Senate - which is just what the bill's opponents seem to want. "If they're not going to calendar discharge again, it may not be necessary to continue lobbying," said Leuzzy. She said, however, "whenever the next thing comes up, we will be prepared to take effective action." JI an RCN STAR!" REAN RCN Di WRCN Mass MeetingWe.Ma9 t8p 530 Student Activities Building Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-763-3501