The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, October 22, 2008 - 7A FIRE From Page 1A were initially displaced by the fire, with the exception of those who lived in the actual room, returned to their rooms last night. LSA freshman Lindsay Brentin, who lives in Fisher Hall and stayed in Markley during the break, said she heard the fire alarms and immediately opened her door to see what was happening. APARTMENTS From Page 1A ing tax subsidies for the project stretched on for several hours. The final vote on the resolutions did not come until after midnight. Ina6-4vote,the Councilapproved up to $8.87 million in tax reimburse- ments to the developers to subsidize construction and site cleanup. The exact amount of the payment will depend on cleanup costs. John Byl, a lawyer for the project's developers, said the next step is to seekcountyandstateapprovalforthe subsidies so construction can begin. The Council also rejected in a 5-5 vote an an amendment that would have reduced the subsidy to about $4.2 million. City Council member Ronald Suarez (D-Ward 1) did not attend the meeting. Dan Ketelaar and Ron Hughes, the project's developers, applied for the subsidy under the Brownfield Redevelopment Act. The act pro- vides tax incentives for projects that "redevelop a contaminated,blighted " or functionally obsolete property." During the meeting, Robert Car- son, a representative for the devel- opers, said reducing the subsidy from $8.87 million to $4.2 million would jeopardize the development as proposed. Matthew Naud, environmental coordinator for Ann Arbor, said the soil at the 601 Forest site, on the corner of South University Avenue and South Forest Street, is polluted with dry-cleaner fluid and petroleum, which would qual- ify the site as contaminated. The developers have argued the site is "functionally obsolete," or economicallyunviable,because the Bagel Factory, one of the buildings now standing on the site, has been vacant for years. But City Council member Mike Anglin (D-Ward 5) "I looked down the hallway and there was water coming out from underthe girl's door," Brentin said. Brentin and her roommate let LSA freshman Karleigh Kroll, whose room suffered water dam- age, keep things in their room until the cleaning crew finished its work. The sprinklers only went off in the room where the fire started, but large amounts of water seeped under the door, rolling down the stairwell and damaging rooms on multiple levels of the hall, Kroll said. said the site's proximity to campus and the business district on South University suggests otherwise. "We are one block from one of the greatest universities in the world," Anglin said. "This -is not a depressed site." The developers' Brownfield proposal covers two categories of costs: environmental cleanup and site preparation, which include demolishing the current build- ings at the site and infrastructure improvements such as installing sewer and water lines. During the public comment period of Monday's meeting, no one spoke against the complex, but several opponents were barred from speaking because procedural rules prohibit the same person from speaking more than once under the same public hearing. The public hearing forthe 601 For- est project was extended multiple times since the Council first con- sidered the project 10 months ago. Several Ann Arbor residents opposed the use of Brownfield subsidies for the developer. They questioned whether the site was polluted enough"to qualify for the Brownfield program and if the city was fiscally healthy enough to grant the subsidy. LSA junior and Ann Arbor native Yousef Rabhi said the devel- opers' proposed pollution cleanup effort would not work. "The contamination has leaked underneath the adjacent road, and the adjacent properties," Rabhi said. "What they're proposing is to clean up this isolated site, but cleaning up the isolated site will not solve the problem." The public comments were fol- lowed by a contentious debate amongthe council members. City Council member Stephen Kunselman (D-Ward 3) said there are many ongoing high-rise con- struction projects that would have "The bigthingforme is all my text- books," she said. "They were on the floor,sothey'reprettymuchdone." Kroll slept in a friend's room on the 3rd floor last night but said she believesshewillbeallowedbackinto her room around5 p.m. tonight. Logan said five of the six dis- placed students stayed with friends at other locations. The sixth student made arrangements with the Dean of Students Office to stay in another residence hall until the damage is repaired. qualified for Brownfield subsidies but did not apply. "We are unfairly subsidizing luxury student housing, when other projectsdid notrequire these tax subsidies even though they were eligible," Kunselman said. City Council member Leigh Greden (D-Ward 3) argued that approving the Brownfield funds would not cost the city anything and was necessary to bring invest- ment dollars into Ann Arbor. "The only thing we're talking about here is reimbursing a devel- oper for expenses using the tax dollars generated from develop- ment on that site," he said. Mayor John Hieftje proposed the amendment to the Brownfield resolution as a compromise. The failed amendment would have cut the subsidy by more than half to only cover environmental cleanup, not infrastructure improvements. Peter Nagourney, co-chair ofthe North Burns Park Neighborhood Association, said, "I think giving them the Brownfield money for inevitable infrastructure develop- ment would have been a bad idea. "I was in support of the amend- ment," he said in an interview. Hughes said the $8.87 million subsidy was necessary for the 14-story plan. Hieftje and Greden said the city had very little power to compel the 601Forest developers to do anything above or beyond satisfying existing city ordinances. Because the origi- nal 21 and 25-story plans had met zoning requirements, there would have been very little legal ground for the Council to deny any version of the proposed development. "We have limited ability to tell people what to do with their land," Greden said. "When they meet the codes, it's ultimately their land." Ketelaar said the proposal was "simply not going to make every- one happy." Michigan State hockey player hospitalized after large brawl Football players may have taken part EAST LANSING (AP) - Police said yesterday they continue to investigate a fight that puta Michi- gan State University hockey player in the hospital. Coaches of the Michigan State football and hockey teams said the athletic department is cooperating with the investigation. The fight early Sunday at an off-campus house may have left three people with bro- ken bones, police said. Hockey defenseman A.J. Sturges of Madison, Wis. was injured in the incident, hockey coach Rick Comley confirmed yesterday. Police said a student-athlete was hospitalized with a broken jaw and CANDIDATE From Page 1A Ilitch is a former president of Ilitch Holdings, the company that manages Little Caesar Enterprises, the Detroit Red Wings, the Detroit Tigers, and Olympia Entertain- ment. She says that role gave her experience in working with large organizations and large budgets comparable to those of a large pub- lic university. Ilitch ran for a spot on the board two years ago, but dropped out of the race before her nomination was confirmed by the Michigan Demo- cratic Party. Ilitch has spent the most of the nine candidates running for two spots on the board. According to campaign finance reports, She's spent just over $35,000 on her cam- paign - about $12,500 more than the second highest spender, Repub- lican John LaFond. The Michigan Democratic Party endorsed Ilitch last month, along with incumbent regent, Democrat Larry Deitch. MDP spokeswoman Liz Kerr said the support for Ilitch is largely due to her focus on keeping tuition rates down. "It's really important to us that we have regents in place that under- stand that we have to keep college possibly other head injuries during the fight, but they did not release his name. Sparrow Hospital officials said yesterday that Sturges had been released from the hospital. The university and East Lansing police have notreleased thenames of others who may have been involved, but police say the incident involved both athletes and people outside the school's athletic program. East Lansing police say no arrests have been made. Michigan State football Coach Mark Dantonio called the incident "disappointing" during his Tuesday press conference. "My only statement would be is that we're cooperating with author- ities," Dantonio said. Comley told reporters: "There's not a problem between the football affordable," Kerr said. "We need peoplelikeherontheboardcontinu- ing to make education affordable to Michigan students. She understands that this is key to economic develop- ment here in Michigan and turning our economy around." Ilitch's campaign has been boost- ed by endorsements by several prom- inent union groups, including United Auto Workers, the University's Lec- turers' Employee Organization, Michigan Professional Firefighters Union, Michigan Education Associa- tion, American Federation of Teach- ers, and Michigan AFL-CIO.' Kirsten Herold, vice president of LEO, said the union endorsed Ilitch because ofher concern with keeping education affordable and accessible for students of all economic levels and because ofher knowledge of the union issues like job security, health care costs and wages. "As an employer, she and her fam- ily have a very good track record of relations with the various unions in their workplaces," Herold wrote in an e-mail. "She knows what it is like to work with unions towards a com- mon goal." - Ilitch said she also wants to focus on the University's accessibility, increasing financial aid and finding ways to ease the burden of student loans post-graduation. While her area of focus is helping students with their finances dur- program and the hockey program. There was an incident involving a party, multiple students, not just athletes. It's unfortunate but I think it'll be sorted out, and the police are dealing with it and everybody's cooperating." The incident came just a week after a University of Michigan hockey player, Steve Kampfer, was injured in a possible assault in Ann Arbor. Police and the universityhave not named Kampfer but his mothertold The Ann Arbor News he was injured in an assault. The Michigan athletic depart- ment has said Kampfer was injured in an off-the-ice incident. No arrests have been made in the case but police have said they have a suspect. ing their time in school, Ilitch said she also wants to aid them in the transition from college to career. If elected, she said she'd be interested in helping graduates find jobs in the state by partnering them with men- tors or established organizations. "Our economy is changing," Ilitch said. "We're moving from a manu- facturing-based economy to a knowl- edge-basedeconomy.We're at areally critical point where we have to con- tinue to investin education and invest in our kids in order to have a strong economy and be able to compete. To me, this is time well spent." Don Lee, chief marketing man- ager at Clark Hill PLC, a law firm in Detroit where Ilitch works, had high praise for her. "She's superwoman," he said. In his time working with Ilitch, Lee said her skills as "a problem solver with a creative twist" have most impressed him. Lee said the firm recruited Ilitch a few years ago because of her unique business perspective, her involvement with service projects and her connection to many differ- ent industries and people. "The University would be lucky to have her in that role," Lee said. "I believe she can really be a differ- ence-maker. I trust her and I know that she works hard and is really passionate.When she gets involved, watch out." i' 1 Vr U.S.AIR FORCE R*O+T*C INTERNING WITH US ISN'T ROCKET SCIENCE. THEN AGAIN, MAYBE IT IS. The U.S. Air Force is looking for electrical, computer and environmental engineering students who want to work with some of the most advanced technology in the world and at the same time get paid well to do it. If all this sounds intriguing to you, contact AFROTC and learn how you can spend your summer on the cutting edge. Pay is $4,500 for 10 weeks Round-trip airfare, lodging and living expenses Rental car Students who complete the program may be offered AFROTC scholarships. Pays 100% of tuition and fees $900/year for books $400-500 tax-free monthly stipend Call 1-734-764-2403 or visit AFROTC.com. Wondering if you're making the right career decisions? Get your questions answered with 30-Minute Mentors, brought to you by the Alumni Association. The Alumni Association helps you prepare for your next stage in life even before you graduate. Meet one-on-one with a U-M alum in a casual setting and find out what his or her job is like all for free! This is your chance to connect, network and get your questions answered from someone who knows. It could be the most important 30 minutes you spend on campus this fall. Q, When: Friday, October 24 Sessions offered from 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m., Pick the time that fits your schedule. Where: Alumni Center, 200 Fletcher St., at the corner of Fletcher and J Washington, next to the Michigan League and across from MLB. Who: Alumni in a variety of career fields, including, marketing, finance, /e 4 4? law, medicine, homeland security and journalism. The spots are limited and will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis so sign up today! www.umalumni.com/students ALUMNIASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Uniting the Leaders and Best