STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, August 87, 2004 - 9A State unemployment down due to yearly hiring cycles LANSING (AP) - Michigan's job climate improved slightly in August as automakers and related employers ended short-term summer layoffs. The state's seasonally adjusted unem- ployment rate was 6.7 percent, down from 6.8 percent in July. The state had 20,000 more manu- facturing jobs in August than in July, according to Department of Labor and Economic Growth figures released yesterday. But the rebound was expected and reflects a typical Michi- gan pattern. Automakers typically shut down for a while in July as they retool their assem- bly lines for the next model year. Many of those workers were back on the job in August. Michigan still is suffering the loss of manufacturing jobs in the long term. There were about 18,000 fewer manu- facturing jobs last month than in August 2003, according to state statistics. The loss of manufacturing jobs has been one of the main reasons Michigan's economic recovery has been somewhat slower than the national average. "A lot of it has to do with the composition of the economy," said East Lansing economist Robert Kle- ine. "Manufacturing is still pretty important here, and manufacturing has been pretty stagnant nation- wide." Other negative employment trends emerged from July to August. The state lost jobs in retail, construction and gov- ernment. Michigan added professional ser- vice, health service and educational service jobs in August. Employment also increased slightly in tourism, hos- pitality and leisure - a segment that has been one of Michigan's strongest this summer. The state's unemployment rate was 6.7 percent, down from 6.8 percent in July. Overall employment increased by 2,000 jobs in August. There were 8,000 fewer people unemployed in August than in July. Michigan's overall labor market condition remained steady in August, according to Bruce Weaver, acting director of the state's Bureau of Labor Market Information and Strategic Ini- tiatives. The state's overall jobs picture has improved since August 2003, when Michigan's unemployment rate was 7.5 percent. Attorney general says gay Fords police car record on trial BELLEVILLE, Ill. (AP) - Ford Motor Co. continued to sell Crown Vic- toria police cars even after the deaths of several officers in fiery rear-end crashes showed the vehicles were unsafe, a law- yer for Illinois police departments told a jury yesterday in the first class-action lawsuit to come to trial over the widely used cruisers' safety. "That policy of minimizing safety to maximize profits is at the heart of why we're here today," said attorney David Perry, who also showed jurors photos of the officers who had died. Ford's lawyers countered that the Crown Victoria Police Interceptor is safe and that the cruiser is involved in police crashes because officers are more likely than other motorists to travel at high speeds and park at the sides of highways. "I don't mean to minimize or trivial- ize police fatalities," Ford lawyer James Feeney of Detroit told the jury dur- ing Ford's opening statement. "But the question here is whether this car is rea- sonably safe for police work, and it is." The trial that opened yesterday in St. Clair County Circuit Court, 15 miles east of St. Louis, is the first among class- action lawsuits pending in 11 states over the Crown Victoria Police Intercep- tor, a specially built police cruiser that accounts for the majority of police cars on U.S. streets. Fourteen officers since 1983 have died in fiery crashes after their Crown Victorias were rear-ended. None of those crashes occurred in Illi- nois, but the St. Clair County Sheriff's Office and nearby Centreville Police Departments sued anyway, accusing Ford of fraud and deceptive trade prac- tices in a bid to force the company to retrofit their Crown Victorias with spe- cial safety equipment. The lawsuit was filed on behalf of every law-enforcement agency in the state and seeks to have Ford pay to install the safest equipment available to protect the cruisers. "We can't afford to do it ourselves," said St. Clair County Sheriff Mearl Jus- tus, who attended the morning court session. The lawsuit accuses Ford of telling the public the car was safe when it knew it was not. Ford's attorney showed jurors a vid- eotape of a rear-end crash at 100 mph involving a Crown Victoria that did not erupt into flames, in a bid to bolster his claim that the cars ignite only in a small percentage of accidents that cannot be predicted. "With some of these officers, no vehi- cle could have saved them," Feeney said. Ford lawyers have declined to esti- mate how much losing the case could cost the company, which is facing a tough international auto market- place and still recovering from costly litigation involving rollovers by its Explorer SUV. Mich. couples can't LANSING (AP)- An attorney gen- disagreed. Cox wrote in his opin eral's legal opinion that same-sex cou- while same-sex couples cannot ples married in Massachusetts cannot child in the state, one partner m adopt a child together in Michigan has as a single person. angered gay-rights advocates and oth- "In terms of the public polic ers who said yesterday that it disregards state of Michigan, children's best interests. the Legislature "t, a The opinion, written by Attorney has been very Its an General Mike Cox, said a same-sex clear," Thomp- marriage performed in another state is son said. Op1lno invalid in Michigan and therefore pre- Critics say a cludes that couple from obtaining a joint only a joint are a adoption here. adoption gives childr "It's an anti-family opinion," said both parents Beverly Davidson, president of the equal rights to Who n Coalition for Adoption Rights Equal- the child and ity, which supports same-sex adop- allows children homes tions. "There are a number of children adopted by gay in our state who need permanent couples the same who c homes. Limiting who can adopt them financialsecurity is a di is a disservice." and legal rights While the Republican attorney gen- guaranteed to eral's opinion specifically addressed children of mar- whether the state can recognize same- ried couples. Pres sex marriages performed in Massa- Jay Kaplan, chusetts and whether those couples a staff attorney can adopt children in Michigan, critics for the Michigan worry that it further cripples gays' rights branch of the American Civil L and their ability to adopt. Union, said if one partner in s The state's adoption law is ambigu- couple adopts a child, the other ous and appellate courts have not defini- would have no legal obligation tively ruled on the issue, they say. adopted child. Cox spokesman Randall Thompson "If only one parent can be anti-family gn.... There number of en in our state eed permanent s. Limiting 'an adopt them isservice." - Beverly Davidson ident, Coalition for Adop- tion Rights Equality ion that, adopt a ay do so cy of the gally adopt recognized, how is that helping the child?" he said. State Sen. Bill Hardiman (R-Kent- wood), who requested the opinion, said marriage is an institution between one man and one woman and only married couples should be able to adopt. "It's not that I'm against gays, but I do support marriage as it has been defined in this country," Hardiman said. Judges have divided over the issue. Washtenaw County judges once allowed gay and lesbian couples tojointly adopt children. But two years Liberties ago, Chief Judge Archie Brown banned ame-sex those adoptions in the courts under his partner control. Brown said at the time that such n to the adoptions violated state law, which he said allows only individuals and mar- legally ried couples to adopt children. m