OPINION Page 4 Tuesday, March 29, 1988 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVIII, No. 120 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Take back the streets Pittsfield evictions unjust ON MONDAY, March 21, a group of over five hundred students and con- cerned Ann Arbor residents took to the streets to protest the United States' in- vasion of Honduras. The demonstra- tors should be commended for their concern and actions as should the Ann Arbor police for allowing the progres- sive faction of Ann Arbor to control the city, and for endorsing the protest. The protest, which was organized by the Latin American Solidarity Commit- tee-and endorsed by numerous other campus and community groups, was held in opposition to the commitment of the U.S. Army's eighty-second air- borne, an offensive force of 3,200 troops, to Honduras. Protesters assembled at the Federal Building at 4:00 p.m. and after several speeches, moved into the street to communicate their message against U.S. involvement in Central America to rush-hour motorists. The police did not arrest the protesters for blocking traffic and instead aided them, by redi- recting traffic as the demonstrators moved from intersection to intersection throughout Ann Arbor. Captain Conn and the rest of Ann Arbor's finest who were present, showed their solidarity for the cause of peace and justice in Central America by providing the protesters with a free pa- rade permit. The progressive commu- nity of Ann Arbor should examine this model and take advantage of police "compassion." It has become glaringly obvious that Ann Arbor cops are finally realizing they are outnumbered and should allow Ann Arbor activists to control the streets, instead of violently assaulting them as happen during a re- cent anti-Nazi rally. The police, however, did find it nec- essary to commit some abuses during the demonstration. Some protesters were physically moved, either b y pushing or picking them up and throwing them. Also, the police refused to arrest a motorist who intentionally drove into a crowd of people, injuring at least one person. The Ann Arbor police have proven once and for all that their power can be seized by large groups of activists. The progressive community should exploit their new found power. By Cale Southworth In an effort to raise rents and gentrify the Pittsfield Village housing complex McKinley properties, the landlord of the 420 unit development, has terminated the leases of long-time Pittsfield residents and the local tenants' rights activists. In 1968, in response to rent riots in Detroit, the Tenants Rights Act was passed to ensure that a landlord could not terminate a tenancy in retaliation for the tenants' attempts to enforce or secure rights arising from the tenancy. In other words, landlords could not simply seek to evict tenants who requested repairs or other services guaranteed by the lease or rental contract. Later, State Representative Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) authored legislation that included tenants union organizing in this act. Tenants should have the right to a uniontoarepresent their interests to the landlord. Leslie Riester moved into Pittsfield Village in 1982 and signed a year lease to pay $273 per month. After McKinley Properties assumed management of Pitts- field in January of 1986, the rent began to increase dramatically. By the end of her most recent lease, February 1988, her rent had increased to $410. But Riester's story is more tragic than near doubling of her rent. As the mainte- nance and quality of the buildings declined under McKinley Properties, she was forced to withhold rent as of March 1, 1987 to make the landlord company repair a leaky roof and an exterior hole in the wall. As she paid her own heat the city weatheriza- tion code was violated. Riester and her housemate, Martha Perkins, then organized the tenants to col- lectively withhold rent over the generally poor state of repair at Pittsfield and the abusive management of McKinley Properties. There had been sporadic and isolated rent strikes before at Pittsfield to protest the landlord's inaction, but this. was the first organized attempt. By April of 1987, the tenants formed the Pittsfield Village Tenants Union (PVTU) and the rent strike grew to 25 units - all in protest of McKinley Prop- erties unresponsive treatment. McKinley had raised rent, allowed the condition of the properties to decline, refused repairs, and employed corrupt and unreliable man- agement who hassled the tenants and en- tered homes without permission or fore- warning. Rather, than repairing the apartments and meeting the city housing code to col- Cale Southworth is a Daily opinion page editor. summary judgement against the tenants in favor of immediate eviction. Judge Alexander considered the defense frivolous and placed a $6000 appeal bond on the case. It is a serious miscarriage of justice for Alexander to rule against the tenants when they were not even present to present their case. Further, a bond of $6000 is outra- geous, and strongly discourages chal- lenges of a court's decision, even if the court is wrong. Appeal bonds typically are only a few hundred dollars and might be as light as the payment of rent into escrow. If the tenants want to appeal this harsh and un- fair decision they must come up with lect rents, the landlord chose, as is fre- quently the case, to take the tenants to court to collect the rent. Moreover, McKinley refused to recognize the PVTU. Most of the cases were settled out of court and in each case with a PVTU member, the landlord company asked for a writ of eviction or termination of the cur- 'Very, very few people are finding affordable housing in Ann Arbor.' -Leslie Riester, Pittsfield Village resident and tenant organizer Du Pont ceases CFCs rent lease. McKinley properties sought to break the PVTU and curtail tenants rights to the essential housing services guaran- teed to them in their leases. In Riester and Perkins' case, McKinley properties refused to renew their lease which ended in February of 1988. This has consistently been McKinley's strategy at Pittsfield: to refuse renewal or evict any- one who spoke out for tenants rights or who asked for repairs. Last year, McKinley refused to renew the lease of an elderly tenant who had lived in the Pittsfield complex for 25 years. Similarly, Riester had held her lease for six years and several other tenants with residency of five years or more were re- fused renewals. In all cases, these tenants had either complained to the management for repairs or were members of the PVTU or both. McKinley Properties persecutes tenants who attempt to speak out against the management and secure their rights to hospitable housing from the landlords. Although McKinley Properties settled with Riester and Perkins, granting them four months free rent, the landlords were denied the writ of eviction or any guaran- tee of termination of the lease agreement. Riester's and Perkins' lease expired in February. Predictably, McKinley refused to renew their lease in clear violation of the Retaliatory Evictions Defense. McKinley not only attempted to force Riester and Perkings out with tactics of inaction on repairs and suit for payment, but they again denied a renewal to the key activists for tenants' rights. Worse yet, when Riester and Perkins attorney brought the Retaliatory Evictions Defense to court, the Washtenaw County judge, George W. Alexander, ruled in a $6000, but they risk losing all this money if they lose to the landlord in appellate court. The judge obviously has some hid- den motive for not wanting his verdict challenged. McKinley Properties and the Washtenaw county court system are collaborating to crush tenants' rights.- If the Retaliatory Evictions Defense is not upheld, then no tenant who speaks out or complains will be safe from eviction or reprisals from their landlord. This case illustrates the need for rent, stabilization which disallows any increases in rent unless there are regular housing inspections and guarantees of safe and ten- antable conditions. As rents continue to climb and the housing market continues to shrink, landlords and large property com- panies such as McKinley Properties and Wilson White Co. will receive more mo- nopolistic power over tenants which will result in more abuse. Assuming, as Judge Alexander did, that tenant cases are irrelevant and that the landlord would never retaliate against ten- ants for just complaints will forever si- lence those the people most in need for fair rents and good housing. Obviously a low income family would have a hard time finding a $6000 bond and could never af- ford to loose it fighting a landlord. Without the retaliatory evictions defense and rent stabilization, justice will remain in the hands of the rich and the less fortu- nate will continue their flight to Ypsilanti or Dexter and be forced to commute to work. In the words of one AFSCME hos- pital employee who used to live in Ann Arbor but has since moved due to high rents, "They want us to work in Ann Ar- bor, but they don't want us to live there." N AN UNEXPECTED MOVE, the E.I. Du Pont de Nemours and Company, the world's largest producer of chlo- rofluorocarbons (CFCs), Thursday announced that it will discontinue production of these atmosphere- damaging chemicals. While scientists have for 14 years suspected that CFCs destroy the essential atmospheric filter o f ultraviolet radiation, the ozone layer, it was not until recently that scientists could positively prove this hypothesis. Last year 31 nations, including the United States, drafted a treaty to limit world production of the chemicals in an attempt to slow the depletion of the ozone layer and hopefully minimize the deleterious effects of ozone loss in the future. Unfortunately, only the U.S. and Mexico have ratified the treaty which requires ratification by 11 nations in order to be binding. Du Pont's decision comes a week after a government panel of 100 'Prepy'kil' ROBERT E. CHAMBERS Friday pleaded guilty to first-degree man- slaughter in a case which attracted national attention. It is a sad social commentary that the socioeconomic status of this 21 year-old has had such bearing on his trial. Chambers immediately admitted guilt in the killing of 18 year-old Jennifer Levin, who, like Chambers, was also a wealthy resident of New York's Upper East Side, but, for the last seventeen months he maintained that the death was accidental. The 6-4, 190 pound Chambers held that he struck Levin in self-defense after the much smaller. woman had bound his arms with a pair' of panties. Chambers' claims did not reconcile with the fact that Ms. Levin's neck was severely bruised and that manual strangulation was the cause of her death. This case of the "preppy" murder came to national prominence not for the barbarity of the crime - equally heinous crimes occur everyday in New York City - but because it is such a rare occurrence for someone of Mr. Chambers' status to ever appear in the limelight for their crimes. Affluent, white men are less often suspected of criminal activity, and if they are, they scientists concluded that ozone depletion was occurring much more rapidly that first predicted, and that health effects would soon become very costly. Du Pont upheld a promise made in 1974 to phase out CFC production if scientists could positively link ozone dissipation to these chemicals which are used as refrigerants, cleaning solvents, and in styrofoam products. As a producer of 25 percent of the world's CFC output, Du Pont shows commendable leadership when many nations, including the U.S., are loathe to act on this pressing problem. The major chemical producer plans to re- duce its production by 95 percent by the year 2000. Although some critics contend that Du Pont is phasing out CFC production for fear of lawsuits and hopes of capturing the CFC-substitute market, such pessimism should not occlude the beneficial aspects of Du Pont's decision. ler convicted paid in Manhattan. Not only has the Chambers trial re- ceived too much attention due to his class and skin color, but it seems pos- sible that Chambers may receive undue leniency in his sentencing due to these factors. While a charge of first-degree manslaughter carries a maximum penalty of 8-1/3 to 25 years, many ob- servers believe that Chambers' sent- ence will be much lighter. Stringency, not laxness, should be stressed when final sentencing of Chambers takes place on April 15. In the plea bargain, Chambers admitted guilt in a $70,000 theft, and this should be considered when determining his sentence. Upon accepting the plea bar- gain, Chambers confessed that he meant to kill Ms. Levin, not just defend himself against her sexual advances. Such a plea means that Chambers has lied to authorities for 17 months by stating that the death was accidental. Further, the brutality of the killing de- mands more than a minimum sentence. The Chambers trial proves that justice can sometimes prevail in a system that is largely commanded by wealth and race. Surely, a poor, Black man accused of such a crime would have been found guilty in much less time because he would not have had LETTERS: CIA interviews show ignorance To the Daily: tal murder, rape and torture of car SACUA's statement con- civilian men, women, and the demning anti-CIA protesters children is well known. This reei has to be answered. The Daily very tiny fraction of what the may quoted SACUA member Prof. CIA does in the world shows but Tom Lenaghan, saying that that freedom for the CIA means mai their statement supports "a the lack of freedom for the wit student's right to have an people of Asia, Africa, and tor uninterupted job interview." Latin America. The "right" to end Prof. Shaw Livermore i s "plan careers" with the CIA is quoted as being dismayed that the right to be paid for helping rI "lawful interviews" were pre- to violently trample the rights hasg vented, and that "free unre- of others; it is nothing else. sua stricted job interviews are S se j something that everyone Students who seek a "job Re should be concerned with." The interview" with the CIA have, fori SACUA statement itself sup- at best, been on the receiving wit ports the "right ... to speak end of an extremely poor free with whomever they wish as education about world politics this they plan careers beyond the and economics, colonialism he University." and oppression. Or they simply md In a society whose govern- lack the type of morality to be ment oppresses others, talk of "freedom" and "rights" in the abstract is often used as a cover for protecting the "rights" of the oppressors to oppress. So let us speak concretely. Just 15A D&-TE. what does a career with the * CIA entail? The history and role of the CIA is not up for o debate. It is an instrument of aggression, foreign domina- tion, dictatorship, and torture. The CIA organized the 1960 violent coup d'etat against the Congo's Patrice Lamumba, the 1973 coup against Allende in Chile, and against Arbenz in rTtemali n the 1950-,_ t isi e about such things, since ir right to "plan ca- rs" must take precedence. It y be both of these things, let us not forget that the in "right" being interfered h is the "right" of the CIA recruit for its murderous s. hstress here that a fight for its which have been violated always necessitated the ppression of other "rights"; agan's 1980 election plat- im included speeches replete h the slogan of "individual edom." As he embellished s theme, it became clear that meant the rights of the ividual corporations not to hampered by anti- discrimination statutes, or health and safety regulations - the right to have freer reign without regard for the rights of people. Again, this is not a free, classless world. To protect the rights of people, the rights of those who would smash their freedom (such as the CIA and those who would work for it) have to be curtailed. It is a fine idea that people desiring to sign up with this U.S. agency of imperialism, aggression, dictatorship, and torture are prevented from doing so, or are forced to slink under some rock with their future employers in order to do so. -Tina O'Donnell March 10 VOTE FPM j ' ILI ol JI