The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 8, 2001- 5A Better safe than sorry Kilpatrick discusses new plans to improve Detroit DETROIT (AP) - His voice hoarse from little sleep and a lot of cheering, newly elected mayor Kwame Kilpatrick yesterday talked about revamping the police department, improving neighbor- hoods and creating the type of city that can compete with the world. From college football player to school teacher to state representative, Kilpatrick, at age 31, embarks on the latest in a whirlwind political career, becoming one of the youngest elected mayors of Detroit. It's a job that comes with a laundry list of challenges, further compounded by an esti- mated multimillion-dollar budget shortfall. The state House Democratic leader defeated City Council president Gil Hill on Tuesday. He replaces Mayor Dennis Archer, who announced in April he would not seek a third term. With 91 percent of precincts reporting yesterday, Kilpatrick had 104,287 votes or 54 percent to Hill's 88,992 votes or 46 percent. Kilpatrick has grown up with politics. His father is Bernard Kilpatrick, chief of staff to Wayne County executive Ed McNamara and a former Wayne County commissioner. His mother is U.S. Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kil- patrick. He takes congratulatory phone calls from Al Gore and Dick Gephardt. When he was done talking to Gephardt on yesterday, he passed the phone to his mother, telling Gephardt, "my mom wants to talk to you a little bit." Rep. John Hansen (D- Dexter), said Kilpatrick has worked to bring Democrats and Republi- cans in the House together and has taught leadership Kilpatrick skills to people who are almost twice his age. "I think Detroit has a future. Kwame repre- sents the future. The man is born to lead," Hansen said. But leading the city of Detroit, with its declining population, high crime rate, bro- ken street lights, poor transportation system and thousands of abandoned structures will be a different challenge. Political analysts suggested before the election that campaign promises would immediately be broken because of a pro- jected $33 million budget shortfall for the fiscal year. Kilpatrick acknowledged the tough road ahead. "We'll never experience the kind of incredi- ble ups and incredible downs as we'll face in the next four, eight, 12 years," Kilpatrick said. But he said that during his campaign he always stressed organization, which "costs nothing." "We want to spend our first 180 days on organization, making sure the city works. We can't compete and we'll never have any money if the city isn't organized," Kilpatrick said. He lists education, neighborhoods and the city's beleaguered police department as areas ripe for restructuring. Improving the police department, he said, includes taking officers from task forces and putting them back into precincts, making commanders accountable and working with federal authorities. The police department is under investigation by the U.S. Justice Department over fatal shoot- ings by Detroit officers, prisoner deaths in lock- ups and allegations that detectives illegally detained potential homicide witnesses. AP PHOTO At the City of Detroit's vote counting headquarters, an election worker wears a protective mask and gloves as he processes absentee ballots. Problems encountered in counting absentee ballots Even with absentee tallies, Kilpatrick maintains eight point lead over Hill DETROIT (AP) - Absentee ballots in the city's election were still being tallied yester- day after a problem counting absentee ballots halted the process for hours. Elections officials temporarily stopped their count shortly after noon Tuesday, after the state said the city failed to use software designed to identify flawed ballots. The count resumed at 7 p.m., City Clerk Jackie Currie said. "The votes will be counted and everybody who voted by absentee, as long as they didn't overvote, their votes will be counted," Mayor Dennis Archer said. Secretary of State spokeswoman Elizabeth Boyd said elections officials expected to be finished counting the absentee ballots by noon yesterday. Despite the counting problems, Kwame Kilpatrick defeated Gil Hill to become one of the youngest elected mayors in Detroit's history. With 91 percent of precincts reporting, Kilpatrick had 104,287 votes or 54 percent to Hill's 88,992 votes or 46 percent. Wayne County Circuit Judge Cynthia Stephens ordered the clerk's office to count the absentee ballots using the state-mandated software, including re-counting 13,000 bal- lots that already had been tabulated using an electronic scanning system. ' In order to make sure every vote counts, state officials directed clerks to use software that kicks out problem ballots, allowing clerks to determine if it is a valid vote, state elections director Chris Thomas said. The state did not order the city to stop counting absentee ballots, but told them to start using the software, he said. Regular bal- lots from polling places were not affected. Flawed ballots include so-called overvotes, in which too many candidates are selected for a specific race, and ballots that are filled out by a pen or pencil that can't be read by a machine. Overvoting one race did not void an entire ballot, so few if any ballots would be thrown out entirely, Currie said. She did not know how many absentee ballots contained errors. State officials found out Tuesday morning that Detroit election workers weren't follow- ing the stkte's mandate, Thomas said. "The fact that it must be implemented is not their option," he said. "We have uniform standards, and we cer- tainly intend to enforce them," Secretary of State Candice Miller said. Currie, who was running for re-election, said earlier that city officials started using the same procedures Tuesday that they had used during the September primary. They had no indication there was a problem until the state intervened in the middle of the count, she said. Consumers Energy announces rate hike LANSING (AP) - Consumers Energy's natural gas customers will see their monthly bills increase between $15 and $25 this winter, the Jackson-based utility said yes- terday. November's average monthly gas bill is expected to be $50.78, more than the average $42.86 bill at the same time last year. The utility is charging $3.72 per thousand cubic feet for gas this month. The average household uses 10,000 cubic feet per month. In December, gas bills are expected to increase to an average $87.30 because the utility will charge $3.85 per thousand cubic feet of gas, an increase of 3.5 per- cent. Last December, the average monthly bill was $71.14. Consumers Energy expects to continue charging $3.85 per thou- sand cubic feet until April 2002, but bills will fluctuate based on usage. The winter increase is lower than the $40 to $60 hike Consumers Energy originally anticipated just before finishing its three-year con- tract with the state earlier this year to keep its rates frozen at $2.84 per thousand cubic feet. Carl English, Consumers Energy president and chief executive offi- cer for natural gas, said the utility's 1.6 million gas customers are bene- fiting from good timing. "Our frozen rate protected them from the big price jumps last win- ter," English said. "Natural gas prices have dropped since then." November bills also will include a pamphlet outlining assistance programs available to low-income families who may have trouble pay- ing their heating bills. The Home Heating Credit is one of the ways customers could reduce their heating bills. Customers who apply for the credit beginning in January could receive up to $150 to help them afford their bills. Earlier this week, Michigan Con- solidated Gas Co. said it expects to charge gas customers around $4.50 per thousand cubic feet beginning on Jan. 1, 2002, up from $2.95 last year. The utility is scheduled to fin-