8'- The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 9, 1994 Crime bill to distribute $200 million for more police E The new crime bill should provide 20,000 officers over next 16 months The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Attorney General Janet Reno yesterday an- nounced that the Justice Department plans to distribute $200 million for about 2,600 police by Oct. 1, the first week the crime bill goes into effect. "This bill will fight crime on the street and local level, notjust in Wash- ington, not just by talk in Washing- ton," Reno said in a speech at the National Press Club - an effort to show that the crime bill is more than political rhetoric and that her depart- ment is furiously planning for the implementation of the six-year, $30 billion crime bill. In addition to the funding sched- ule, Reno also detailed a broad, but specific blueprint outlining how the program will be implemented for the first two years. That includes: Providing money for 40,000 police officers - 20,000 in the first 16 months. The bill, which President Clinton is expected to sign next week, calls for 100,000 more police over six years. Justice Department officials yesterday could not say where the funding would go first. ® Allocating $1 billion for pris- ons, bootcamps and prevention pro- grams. Funding 1,000 new federal bor- der-patrol officers. ® Placing 300,000 youths in crime-prevention programs. * Forming an advisory commit- tee within the department to address violence against women. The crime bill calls for various steps to deal with domestic violence, including funding for battered-women shelters. In addition to specific goals, Reno also made staffing changes that will support her initiative. Associate At- torney General John Schmidt, num- ber three at Justice, will be respon- sible for implementing the program. "I want accountability at the high- est levels of the department," Reno said, noting she has interviewed po- lice from around the country to over- see the grant program for new police. The new law will require about 150 new federal employees to administer its various provisions. "We have an historic opportunity," Reno said. "In Washington, we must do it the right way." Next week Reno and President Clinton are scheduled to meet with all 93 U.S. attorneys to discuss the rami- fications of the new federal criminal provisions that are part of the law, including the new death-penalty leg- islation. By Monday Reno is sched- uled to have held a series of forums on crime-bill implementation in Denver, Los Angeles and Springfield, Ill. The crime bill authorizes $30 bil- lion over six years to come out of a new trust fund supported by savings from mandated cuts in federal per- sonnel. Reno yesterday spoke of that money as a reality and offered some criticism of the naysayers who nearly blocked the bill from passage, calling them "armchair quarterbacks." For those who described the bill as "pork, soft on crime" Reno said they "should listen to the people on the frontline." $2.50 zo$150 True Math. J* 44 .4110 &' gasic Reno Ms. Engler, pregnant with triplets, told to rest LANSING (AP) - First Lady Michelle Engler, who is expected to deliver triplets later this year, has been ordered off the campaign trail for the rest of her pregnancy. "For all practical purposes, I'm in for the duration," Mrs. Engler told the Detroit Free Press in Thursday's edi- tions. She has to get extra bed rest and avoid stress. "They don't want me to exercise," she said. "I don't even walk around the block." That means Mrs. Engler won't be alongside her husband, John, as he campaigns for his second term as gov- ernor. "It's not that I feel I could make a huge difference this time, but I wish I could be out there talking about the good things my husband has done," she said. The Englers were married following his election in 1990. The election is Nov. 8, with Mrs. Engler expected to give birth some- time that month. She last appeared publicly in August at the state Repub- lican Convention. Mrs. Engler, 36, has a history of miscarriage. It is not unusual for doc- tors to order bed rest in cases of mul- tiple pregnancy, which are consid- ered high risk, and after considering the age and medical history ofapreg- nant woman. The children will be the first for the couple. Your gnnlfl I Qavin j5 $ 'o c5 6 committed students needed: MAKE A DIFFERENCE! enroll in soc 389, sec 007 I:Z $30 $40 $50 $60 $70 $go $90 $100 your monfikly f'hone il I PrQe. Comm ty Info: 2205 Michigan Union, 763-3548 Help sup- port adults with devel- opmental disabilities who want to work. 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