The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 28, 1994 - 5 Clinton gives nod to new Florida welfare plan WASHINGTON (AP)-In apre- 4 iew of the president's plan to over- haul the nation's welfare system, the Clinton administration gave Florida permission yesterday to experiment with time-limited benefits and subsi- dies to employers who hire welfare ecipients. A senior administration official said Florida's demonstration project is significant because it mirrors Presi- dent Clinton's efforts to expand edu- cation, training and child-care for Barents on welfare while limiting their benefits to two years. In his State of the Union address 'uesday, Clinton promised to intro- l.hce welfare-reform legislation this spring. Although the administration has outlined its plan in broad terms, it ias yet to make the tough decisions ,bout costs and financing. Seventeen Senate Republicans, acluding Minority Leader Bob Dole, ;ried to upstage Clinton by introduc- :ng their own plan yesterday. Similar to the House Republicans' bill, the Senate measure would re- quire more welfare recipients to work, irmit aid to immigrants, and force unmarried teenage mothers to live 0 with a parent to qualify for welfare. In Florida, parents who partici- 1*e in the demonstration will be al- lowed to collect welfare for a maxi- mum of 24 months in any five-year period. While on the rolls, parents will be eligible for training, educa- ion, child care, health insurance and intensive case management. The Clinton administration also *wants to limit welfare benefits to 24 months over a certain length of time, he senior administration official said. Its plan will also include counseling, education or training, and help with child care for recipients preparing to leave the rolls., In Florida, the state will guarantee a minimum-wage job for recipients unable to locate work at the end of 24 months, according to the federal De- ,partment of Health and Human Ser- Aces. The state will offer incentive pay- ments to private companies that hire welfare recipients. Employer subsi- dies will also be an element of the Clinton plan, the administration offi- cial said. "Able-bodied people who want to work will get the chance to work and *ihose who don't want to work will be out the door in two years. Those who truly can't work will be unaffected by this new program," said Jim Towey, secretary of Florida's Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services. Parents who refuse to comply will .ose their share of the family's wel- Fare check. Payments to the children could continue, but only through a whird party. The "Family Transition Program" will operate for eight years in two counties - Alachua and Escambia +- beginning next month. I 1: .. , 1 7 7 RA hopefuls fret over possible housing dilemma CHRIS WOLF/Daily Jane Bortnick-Griffith explains her vision of a world connected through a fully digital communications and library environment. Speaker explins0gvernment plans tol regulate Iternetus By JANET BURKITT DAILY STAFF REPORTER While most University students have long since signed their leases for next year, a few must wait on pins and needles until Feb. 28 - the day they find out if they will be a resident advisor (RA) orresidentdirector(RD). The process of applying for these positions is long - too long, many applicants complain. "The process of RA selection takes several months," said Kate Cross, an LSA fifth-year senior and Stockwell RA. "It really is time consuming to apply, andIdon't know if there would be any way to streamline the process unless they changed it completely." So why does the housing division waituntil January to initiate the appli- cation process? Linda Gardner, an employee of the Hill Management Center in the Housing Division, cites the academic standing of the students involved as the primary factor in determining when the application process begins. "The major reason they do it when they do is grade verification. Appli- cants must have a 2.5 GPA and 48 credit-hours to be eligible, and their first-semester grades are needed as criteria for this," Gardner explained. The process began when hundreds of potential applicants participated in mass meetings earlier this month. For the approximately 600 stu- dents who decided to try for a posi- tion, applications were due Jan. 20. Then the applicants role-played in situations that mirror the problems RAs and RDs typically face. Current RAs and RDs rate the performances of the applicants, and those who scored in the top 75 percentile become eli- gible for individual interviews. These applicants will be notified Feb. 2 whether they have been se- lected for interviews. 'I'm kind of worried about what I 'l do next year if I don't get an RA position.' - Matthew Robinson LSA sophomore On the basis of these interviews, conducted next month,just more than 100 applicants will be offered posi- tions. This leaves the few hundred re- maining grappling with the question of where they will live in the upcome ing year - a question that inevitably causes much anxiety. "I'm kind of worried about what I'll do next year if I don't get an RA position. MaybeI'll have to live in the dorms again next year if I don't get accepted, but I'd rather live with friends off campus," said LSA sopho more Matthew Robinson. The housing dilemma RA appli- cants face is by no means a new one. Two years before she was accepted to be an RA, Cross applied and was rejected for a position, forcing her to find an alternativeliving arrangement. "Luckily, I had some friends t9 live with in University Place at Fletcher, but for people who want to live off-campus there are fewer op- tions," Cross said. Jamie Twesten, a third-yeai Inteflex student, is one such person considering himself fortunate to have gotten off-campus housing after be- ing turned down for an RA position last year. "At the last minute, I was able to sign a lease with some friends. I was pretty worried when I didn't get ac- cepted to be an RA because I was afraid I wouldn't be able to get good housing. The house I ended up getting was inexpensive, but it was also re- ally far from campus," Twesten said. By ANDREW TAYLOR DAILY STAFF REPORTER While cruising down the "Infor- mation Highway" you can do any- thing. There are no rules. However, the government could soon post a few stop lights on the Internet to keep the traffic under con- trol and ensure no one gets hurt. The Internet is an elaborate tele- communications network intercon- necting hundreds of thousands of com- puters to provide access to unfathom- able amounts of information to any- one with a desktop computer. Yesterday Jane Bortnick-Griffith, assistant chief for the Science Policy Research Division of The Library of Congress, discussed current public policy ideas to regulate the system. Officials are in a debate about how to compensate people for mak- ing their information public. Since no one owns the Internet, anyone can make their computer an access point for others. "So a lot of this stuff does not come from any type of establishment, butcomes outof people who say, 'I'm going to put this up there,"'Bortnick- Griffith said. For example, when a newspaper publishes itself on the Internet, people can read the paper without paying for the copy orseeing the advertisements. Bortnick-Griffith said, "Unless you provide a compensation system, there is a sense that the good stuff will never get up there." She said thousands of people are making things available over Internet, but added the best information is not getting on to the network. Many officials say the technology exists to monitor who accesses which computers, and customers could be charged a bill for the information they use. However, others refute the no- tion, claiming that people would not use the Internet if they had to pay for virtually every key stroke. "In some cases you may have a collective agreement, but in others it may be a pay-per-view," Bortnick- Griffith said. Another role of the government will be to guarantee that all Ameri- cans have equal access to the Internet, just as the law mandates everyone have access to a telephone. "People are very concerned about inner cities and rural areas being left out of this," Bortnick-Griffith said. Bortnick-Griffith said the govern- ment wants to allow any company the right to package Internet services - just like competing phone companies can provide various services for their customers. "Open it all up, but ensure that it's equitable, ensure that it's really open," Bortnick-Griffith said. Pt Private health care neglects those with disabilities WASHINGTON (AP) - Nearly half the nation's 24 million people with severe disabilities lack private health insurance, the Census Bureau said yesterday in its first comprehen- sive survey of Americans facing spe- cial challenges. Altogether, 49 million Americans have a disability that keeps them from doing one or more of the common activities of life, such as moving around the home, getting in or out of bed or a chair, bathing, dressing, eat- ing or going to the toilet. Whether severe or not, a disability lessens the chance of getting private health insurance, the government sur- vey shows. Forty-three percent of the severely disabled lack private health cover- age. So do 34 percent of all Ameri- cans with disabilities, severeorother- wise. That's far above the 25 percent of all Americans uncovered by private insurers. "It amounts to legalized discrimi- nation within the insurance indus- try," said Linda Kild, managing di- rector of the Disability Rights Educa- tion and Defense Fund, a law and policy center. Health-insurance policies that ex- clude pre-existing conditions or charge higher premiums for people with severe health problems often force the disabled to enter institutions or dispose of their assets in order to be eligible for public assistance, Kild said. Most of the disabled who lack private coverage get health benefits from the government. "We're concerned about disabled people as well, and we're trying to work through the president's health reform proposal," said Dan DiFonzo, spokesperson for the Health Insur- ance Association of America, an in- dustry group. "We believe the best change to the system is going to occur when health security is assured to all Americans through this pending law." Clinton's proposal would require coverage of all Americans regardless of health and pre-existing conditions. Three out of four severely dis- abled Americans in their earning years, 21 to 64, don't have jobs, the census study said. "We found that lack of health- care coverage is one of the biggest impairments to people going out to get a job," said John Lancaster, ex- ecutive assistant to the chair of the President's Committee on Employ- ment of People With Disabilities. Suzanne Liquerman of Stratford, Conn., slipped on a wet floor and damaged her hip in 1985. Nine years later, she walks with difficulty, leads an active life as a volunteer showing people how to re- move physical barriers to the dis- abled, and wants desperately to get a paid job. "If I go back to work and give back my benefits, my medical coverage is compromised," she said. "I'm forced to stay in a position of being on entitlements and being de- pendent. That's very frustrating. That's my anger." After the accident, the slow real- ization that things might never get back to normal gave way to discour- agement. "It's demoralizing," Liquerman said. "Your self-esteem is lower. You feel less adequate." The study also found severely dis- abled Americans are far more likely to receive many forms of government assistance-twice as likely as Ameri- cans in general to receive government housing assistance, nearly four times as likely to receive food stamps and nearly six times as likely to need cash assistance. The study was conducted between 1991 and 1992 and excluded disabled individuals who were living in nurs- ing homes and other institutions at that time. Japan still in deadlock over political reform TOKYO (AP)-Negotiators from he two houses of Parliament aban- *oned efforts to compromise on anti- corruption reforms, throwing Japa- nese politics into deeper turmoil yes- terday night. Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa said earlier in the day that he is ready to quit if the reforms fail. "If I cannot deliver on my promise of political reform, I will not insist on the post of prime minister," he said. Hosokawa said failure to enact reforms would doom five years of effort and would make "the loss of confidence in Japan's party politics complete, and Japan would lose the trustof the international community." The deadlock over reforms also has prevented Hosokawa's govern- ment from putting together a stimulus package for Japan's stagnant economy and distracted it from trade talks with the United States that face a Feb. 11 deadline. Pessimism in the business community led to more selling on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, where the Nikkei Stock Average fell 1.3 percent yesterday. With the Parliament session end- ing Saturday, the committee of 10 lawmakers from each house was un- able to narrow differences over how legislators should be elected and whether they should receive corpo- rate donations, chairperson Yuichi Ichikawa said. Hosokawa urged Yohei Kono, head of the opposition Liberal Demo- cratic Party, to meet with him in an attempt to break the deadlock. "It is in the 50-odd hours we have left that we must show the world that Japan has become a mature democ- racy whose people are able to make wise decisions," Hosokawa said at a news conference. Early today Kono declined to hold a meeting, the Japan Broadcasting Corp. reported. The reform bills were passed by Parliament's lower house in Novem- ber but voted down by the upper house last Friday in a serious blow to Hosokawa's government. Hosokawa's only other chance is to have the lower house override the upper house by a two-thirds vote re- approving the package. When Hosokawa's coalition won elections in August, he vowed to re- form Japan's political system. The dispute threatens to splinter both the Liberal Democratic and So- cialist parties because of differences of views on reform within each party. Read The R.H. Factor in Daily Sports BINDERS, KEEPERS. AI I# (j . a Si yD 4 I ' Friday Q Black Cannon Incident, film 'nonnsred by the Center for Saturday Q Alpha Phi Omega, initiation, Michigan Union. Kuenzei ing, Michigan Union, Ballroom, 2p.m. Qi Ballroom Dane Lessns and . Aa $u01 .R .4El ipS w loIi5