The Michigan Daily, Thursday, September 10, 1987-Page 13 Heat! ev: 'U' By CATHY SHAP When Director of Campus ecurity Leo Heatley came to the University in 1985 to assume his position, he brought with him a goal - to turn campus security ir4o a police force. And if a state bill allowing public colleges and universities to establish their own police forces passes the legislature, Heatley may get his wish. "The University of Michigan is the-only Big Ten, four-year, public .m_ titution without sworn police officers," Heatley said. "We depend on outsiders for authorized safety." Heatley said a separate Univer- sity police force would be more in tune with the University. "Police response would be much better if officers were here everyday, working with the students and staff," he said. If deputized, security officers would be sworn in, authorized to carry a weapon, and' able to make arrests. CAMPUS Security has a bu- d"6t of approximately 2.2 million d tlars, 25 percent of which goes to the Ann Arbor Police Department for the use of seven patrol cars, 14 JO lt.Olj w officers and two detectives. Heatley said that Ann Arbor Police have been responsive to the needs of the campus to the best of their ability. But he said, when security officials get into a situation where they need police support, it usually takes some time before the police arrive. He also said the extra burden of the campus population on the police can affect the safety of campus security officers who are not authorized to carry weapons or make formal arrests. "(The police) try their best to respond to us. They are extremely busy," said a Campus Security Officer who wished to remain anonymous. "I have sometimes wished, though, that I had instant assistance, and it is that moment of waiting that I'm concerned about." He said' HE ALSO said there have been instances when security officers have been threatened because alleged criminal know security officers do not carry a weapon. . Although Heatley has wanted a campus police force since he came needs here, the University has not attem- pted to establish its own force. To get one the University would have had to go through the city sheriff's department for author- ization, and according to Heatley, the University has historically wished to remain out of local politics. But if Senate Bill 309 is passed in the fall, it will empower the University regents and other public institution governing boards the ability "to vest their public safety officers with certain powers and authority and to require those public safety officers to meet certain standards." UNDER this bill a University police force would also be free from subordination to local law enforce- ment agencies and would receive state funding for necessary training programs. Heatley said there would be no necessity for an increase in the budget in order to establish the police force. He said his ultimate goal is to establish a force of 20 sworn polic officers. There would still b ; campus security officers withoL' Iwn arresting powers who woul respond to the minor and les dangerous calls. According to Heatley, ther would also remain a workir relationship with the city polic because the campus could neve have the resources to operate con pletely alone. If the bill passes Heatley woul like to see a police force trainir program begun in the next year ar, a half. But James Brinkerhoff, Vic, President and Chief financi officer, said that the regents haven' even discussed the idea, so 1 doubts that, if the bill passe anything would get started unt three years from now. ALTHOUGH there has bee no organized opposition to the id of a University police force, Mik Phillips, chair of the Stude Rights Committee, is against t] idea. "Just because the idea wor on other campuses, does not mea it will work here," he said. But Sherry Veramay, chair of t Campus Safety Committee said sh would like to see the committ support the idea of a campus polic police force "The campus is a completely separate entity from the city and our department is here as a service for the students, faculty and citizens of MSU," she said. Smith also said that patrolling a campus population is a unique situation. "Some of these young people haven't matured, and they have an aversion to authority and because of this our situation is unique. "It is a plus to have a police force strictly for the campus, which understands the needs and behavior of the population," Smith said. Heatley ... wants a campus police force force. She said, however, "The en sentiment towards the proposal is ea varied because people might not be ke totally informed about the issue." nt Michigan State University has [he had a separate police force since ks 1947. If it were not for the an department, the city police force would have to be vastly expanded, the and according to Beth Smith, he director of the MSU Public ee Relations Department, this would ce be a tremendous burden. RweM We D04~ M06aj44 The Daily has both proponents and bitter critics (Continued from Page 4) sure your own information is faculty and university policies. When asked what could be done press anytime an effort is n deviant and run counter to to those accurate. Tell people that when they They were soon disappointed, about The Daily, University do something about it."' deUithe comunit t large claim they've been misquoted six however, when Board chair Prof. President Robben Fleming wrote in Despite the often de os the community at larged times." Fred Scott adopted a hands-off 1970: criticism, The Daily staff observed Fred Ferris, who studied Occasional inaccuracies have lost policy on editorial matters. "College newspapers everywhere the gaffs are only an unfo DTta lil shilP nioa ctffr ade 'to served insists rtunate 1 i !9 1 I*A~ [la y veue Posing as a sa er. -'But if Daily staffers don't lead tie life of the average student, they at least are reaching the average student, as some Daily editors ond when they asked readers their opinions of the paper in the fighbowl last winter. , M OS T passersby said they liked the paper. Some joked. "It's almost like reading a real newspaper," one student said. One doctoral student, who was also a University undergraduate, said she appreciates The Daily more w than she had as an "Most people here have never lbeen exposed to another college newspaper and don't know how bad most of them are," she said. : But love for the Daily is not Oniversal since it is run by journalism newcomers who are apt to make occasional mistakes. Some f the Daily's most vocal critics all the staffers "proto-journalists" qr "pseudo-journalists." BUT according to 1986 News 9ditor Jerry Markon, "There's nothing you can do to make up for vast mistakes, but you can make 'The Daily has successfully created and is currently maintaining a separate culture that supports values and a social system that.. .run counter to to those of the community at large.' - Fred Ferris, University alumnus have always been, and probably always will be, a thorn. They are inaccurate, biased, often in poor taste, inflammatory and usually staffed by people who are considerably more radical than the student body "IN MOST of these charac - teristics, they find their parallel in commercial newspapers. Perhaps this is the reason the Daily is so vigorously defended by the public byproduct of a necessary process that has gone on for nearly a century. "The sad truth is that people want a free press only as long as it doesn't hurt them or their friends," said 1968 Editor Roger Rapoport. "The Daily doesn't ask you for your love, but we do hope you understand that one permanent risk of a free press is that you might get caught by it. The Daily some readers. "It's too inaccurate to bother with anymore," said former Architecture and Urban Planning Dean Robert Metcalf. Physics Prof. Daniel Axelrod said in an editorial last March, "Virtually every newsworthy event on this campus with which I have been familiar in the last few years has been routinely misunderstood, misreported, and misquoted by the news staff. Several months ago I resolved totally to ignore The Daily in favor of the University Record and Ann Arbor News." WITH some organizations, however, hostility toward the Daily seems to be the norm. The faculty and administration are practically natural enemies of the paper. In 1903 the University Senate established the Board in Control of Student Publications, hoping to curtail The Daily's criticism of hwmi "Although the Board has on occasion experienced anxiety and even chagrin over some of the articles in The Daily, it has carefully and consistently refrained from interfering in any official way with the policy of the editorial staff," Scott said in 1904. ALTHOUGH there are now fewer editorial clashes betweenthe Board and The Daily staff, any dispute with the Board over editorial content must always be resolved favoring the Daily. According to former Board chair Charles Eisendrath, "Regents Bylaw 11.33, which determines the powers of the Board for Student Publications, specifically enjoins the Board from determining editorial policy for constituent publi - cations." But administration frustration with The Daily is nothing new. 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