NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 8, 2004 - 9 Kerry proposes ban on Mich. trash imports from Canada WASHINGTON (AP) - Democrat- ic presidential candidate John Kerry said yesterday he would immediately ban Canadian trash shipments into Michigan if he is elected. "It's time to end Canadian trash dumping in Michigan," Kerry said in a news release. "George W. Bush has let Michigan become Canada's landfill." Kerry said he wouldn't allow fur- ther shipments until the U.S. Envi- ronmental Protection Agency begins enforcing a 1992 treaty that requires Canada to notify the EPA for each shipment of waste entering the Unit- ed States. The treaty allows the EPA to reject shipments for health or environmental reasons. Democrats say the EPA has the power to enforce the treaty now. But EPA Administrator Mike Leavitt says the treaty only covers hazardous waste and that Congress needs to expand the EPA's authority if it wants to regulate other kinds of trash. Leavitt said in July that the Bush administration was working on leg- islation that would expand the EPA's authority, but that legislation hasn't yet been introduced. Leavitt also has asked Canada to begin voluntarily notifying the EPA of trash shipments beginning early next year. U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow and U.S. Rep. John Dingell, both Michigan Democrats, insist the treaty covers all types of trash. They said the Bush administration is stalling because of pressure from waste management companies and trash- exporting states like New York. "I think that they support the inter- ests that are making money off this situation," Stabenow said. Bush campaign officials referred questions to Chris Paulino, a spokes- man for the Michigan Republican Party. Paulino couldn't say why several Republican-sponsored bills that would control Canadian trash shipments have been stalled in Congress. Instead, he said Democrats have gone from say- ing trash is a state issue to blaming the president. "It's time to end Canadian trash dumping in Michigan. ... George W. Bush has let Michigan become Canada's landfill." - Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, in a news release "This is the Democrats getting a lit- tle desperate and doing anything they can to get some press," Paulino said. Dingell, whose district includes Ann Arbor, been trying unsuccessfully to halt Canadian trash shipments since President Clinton was in office. Still, he feels confident Kerry "is seeing this situation the same way we in Michigan see it." Stabenow said the issue took on a new urgency during Bush's presiden- cy because Toronto started sending all of its trash to Michigan in Janu- ary 2003. Michigan now gets about 180 truck- loads of trash each day from Canada, and Stabenow said one-quarter of Michigan's landfill space is now being taken up by trash from Canada and other states. Late last year, Dingell inserted a pro- vision into a spending bill that requires the EPA to spend $1 million enforcing the trash treaty. Michigan lawmakers still are wait- ing for action on a series of other bills. A bill sponsored by Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.) would ban Canadian trash shipments but not shipments from other states in an effort to appease trash-exporting states. A bill sponsored by Rep. Jim Green- wood (R-Pa.) would give states more authority to control trash. Dingell said the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee may vote on those bills as early as next week. . Flight records show Bush ranked in middle of Air National Guard class WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush ranked in the middle of his Air National Guard flight class and flew 336 hours in a fighter jet before letting his pilot status lapse and missing a key readiness drill in 1972, according to his flight records belatedly uncovered yesterday under the Freedom of Information Act. The Pentagon and Bush's cam- paign have claimed for months Bush flew, that all records detailing his fighter pilot career have been made public, in a fighte but defense officials said they found h l i two dozen new records detailing he let his his training and flight logs after status laps The Associated Press filed a law- suit and submitted new requests missed a k under the public records law. "Previous requests from other requesters for President Bush's Individual Flight Records did not lead to the discovery of these records because at the time President Bush left the service, flight records were subject to retention for only 24 months and we understood that neither the Air Force nor the Texas Air National Guard retained such records thereafter," the Pentagon told the AP. "Out of an abundance of caution," the government "searched a file that had been preserved in spite of this policy" and found the Bush records, the letter r p said. "The Department of Defense regrets this over- sight during the previous search efforts." Bush's Vietnam-era service in the Texas Air National Guard has become an issue in the presiden- tial campaign as the candidates spar over who would make the best commander in chief. Supporters of Democratic nominee John Kerry, 336 hours a decorated Vietnam combat vet- eran, have criticized Bush for jet, then serving stateside in the National Guard. Kerry's Republican critics claim Kerry did not deserve some e and of his five medals. Bush has repeatedly said he is ey drill, proud of his Air National Guard service. White House spokes- men said as late as last week the administration knew of no other records of Bush's military service. "These documents confirm that the president served honorably in the National Guard," White House spokeswoman Claire Buchan said last night. The newly released records show Bush, a lieuten- ant in the Texas Air National Guard, ranked No. 22 in a class of 53 pilots when he finished his flight train- ing at Moody Air Force Base in Georgia in 1969. Over the next three years, he logged 326.4 hours as a pilot and an additional 9.9 hours as a co-pilot, most- ly in the F-102A jet used to intercept enemy aircraft. Of the 278 hours he flew in the interceptor, about 77 hours were in the TF-102A, the two-seat trainer ver- sion of the one-seat fighter jet. The records show his last flight was in April 1972, which is consistent with pay records indicating Bush had a large lapse of duty between April and October of that year. Bush has said he went to Alabama in 1972 to work on an unsuccessful Republican Senate cam- paign. Bush skipped a required medical exam that cost him his pilot's status in August of that year. Bush's 2000 campaign suggested the future presi- dent skipped his medical exam in part because the F-102A was nearly obsolete. Records show Bush's Texas unit flew the F-102A until 1974 and used the jets as part of an air defense drill during 1972. A six-month historical record of his 147th Fighter Interceptor Group, also turned over to the AP yester- day, shows some of the training Bush missed with his colleagues during that time. Significantly, it showed the unit joined a "24-hour active alert mission to safeguard against surprise attack" in the southern United State beginning on Oct. 6, 1972, a time when Bush did not report for duty, according to his pay records. *1 530 S. State St. 734.763.TKTS located on the ground floor of the michigan union Your one-stop source for on- campus concerts and plays, student events, transportation, discount Cedar Point tickets and much more! www.mutotix.com I