Vol. LXXXIX, No. 38-S The chigan Daily Friday, July 6, 1979 Sixteen Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents Unpaid parking tickets BY JOHN GOYER Motorists who fail to pay parking tickets may have the response will be prompt," he said. their driver's licenses suspended if City Council passes Laidlaw noted that motorists responc a new parking ordinance, tentatively approved Mon- tickets for moving violations such as day night, aimed at reducing the number of unpaid they do to parking tickets, because the, parking tickets. the power to suspend a driver's licen. Council is rewriting the city's parking ordinance to paya ticket for a moving violation. meet the stipulations of a new state law going into ef- Under the new ordinance, the city feet August 1, which allows the city to ask the state At- citation to a car owner if he did nc torney General's Office to revoke a motorists's license parking ticket, Laidlaw said. If the owi if he or she does not pay a parking ticket. The ordinan- respond, the city could then move to1 ce does not specify the number of unpaid tickets suspended. required before the city can request suspension. COUNCIL MEMBER Earl Greene (I CITY ATTORNEY Bruce Laidlaw said Monday called the new ordinance "excessi night the new ordinance would speed up payment of Laidlaw if the city had other means av parking tickets. "We have reason to believe that once a ce the parking regulations. person receives notice that his license will be revoked, Laidlaw replied that the city could c may cost license d much faster to speeding, than city already has se for failure to y would mail a ot respond to a ner still failed to have his license D-Second Ward) ve." He asked vailable to enfor- urrently have a car towed, have personal property seized and could even garner money from a person's paycheck for failure to pay parking fines. Greene also asked Laidlaw whether, under the new state law, the city would have to resort to suspending driver's licenses to enforce parking rules. LAII)LAW SAID the ordinance had to be written so that the city had the power to ask the state to suspend a driver's license. But, he said, the city could simply not ask the state to revoke licenses if it did not wish to use the power. According to Assistant City Administrator Patrick Kenneyabout85 per cent of the approximately 300,000 parking tickets issued each year are eventually paid. The city received about $615,000 in the last fiscal year from parking fines, according to city budget figures. Dems plan mail drive to draft Kennedy WASHINGTON (AP) - With the backing of a Democratic labor leader, a nationwide direct-mail fund-raising campaign is being organized to draft Sen. Edward Kennedy for president. The drive is being handled by a professional Washington political mailing firm, which also raises money for the Democratic Party. And the first fund-raising letter is signed by William Winpisinger, president of the Machinists Union and a leader of the party's liberal wing. Winpisinger, an outspoken critic of the Carter administration, said the Kennedy draft is being organized because the government under AP Photo President Carter "is hopelessly paralyzed. It flounders hopelessly, without direction in its approaches to the pressing problems of today." No injuries WINPISINGER conceded that Carter with heavy "is an honest, dedicated public servant with good intentions." But he also said "that is simply not enough" and added that Kennedy "is the one who can provide ... true leadership." Roger Craver, president of the . mailing firm, Craver, Mathews, and Smith, said his 20,000 to 50,000 letters will be sent out beginning next week. He the new said contributions from the first tal beds in mailing will be used for additional ver which mailings until Kennedy either announ- ces for president or takes himself fir- n the state mly out of the race. een named Winpisinger said as returns from the mailings come in they will be shown to request of Kennedy as proof of public support and ed parties financial backing for his race, ys to fulfill "WE WILL personally cover his desk with the names of those citizens ps, such as who ... want to be counted among ear-and-a- those calling upon him to be a can- 1. didate," Winpisinger's letter said. hat it ser- Kennedy has repeatedly said he is not [ealth, and a candidate and expects to support Car- of hospital ter for re-election. However, the senator also has declined to make any .1 planning solid statement that he will not become See PEMS, Page 2 IRoofjcollapses A portion of the roof of the sprawling General Motors plant in Kansas City, Kan. collapsed early yesterday.A were reported. A company spokesperson said the repair had been started on part of the roof and that, along' rains and high winds, may have caused the collapse. p REGIONAL PLANNERS' REQUEST DENIED: State: No second review o hosIta By JOHN GOYER The director of the Michigan Department of Public Health has refused to allow the regional health planing council a second review of plans for a new University Hospital. In a letter released Monday, Health Department Director Dr. Maurice Reizen told the regional health planning council that further delay in the state review of the hospital plans would be "unfair" to the University and to the state. COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH Planning Council for Southeastern Michigan (CPHC) President Della Goodwin last week asked Gov. William Milliken and Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) Secretary Joseph Califano to force the Public Health Department to send the hospital plans back to the regional council for another review. Members of the regional planning council charge that the public health department and the University have ignored regional planning concerns in agreeing on changes in the hospital plans at the state level, after the University refused to amend the plans during the regional review process. The Department of Public Health has indicated it will ap- prove the hospital project, with stipulations thaf the size and cost of the project be reduced. REGIONAL PLANNERS are worried that hospital will add to the problem of too many hospi the seven-county southeastern Michigan region o they have jurisdiction. Regional planners also complain that interest o bond issue which will finance the project has not b by the University asa cost. In his letter Monday, Reizen also refused the the regional planners that a task force of interest be convened in order to find more cost effective way the mission of University Hospital. HE SAID THE regional council and other grouj Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Michigan, had a y half to participate in planning the proposed hospita Reizen further reminded the regional council-t ves an advisory role to the Department of Public H that the department had the final say on approval4 projects. He said his department had addressed regiona See STATE, Page 2