The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 16, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS . DETROIT Stimulus brings few private-sector jobs The federal stimulus funding that has reached Michigan so far has created few private-sector jobs and some recipients of the cash have overstated the number of jobs created or protected, an analysis by the Detroit Free Press shows. The newspaper's examination of the more than 1,800 awards to agencies, departments, municipali- ties and firms in Michigan under the stimulus act found the biggest impact was spurring or protecting public-sector or summer jobs - not private-sector jobs. At first glance, the impact of the federal stimulus act thus far looks like good news for Michigan, which in September had the nation's high- est unemployment rate at 15.3 per- cent. Officials said that by Sept. 30, some 22,500 jobs had been cre- ated or saved in roughly the seven months since Congress passed the stimulus plan. Michigan was promised $5.2 bil- lion in stimulus money, $.2 billion of which had arrived. Close inspection reveals flaws in the claims and raises doubts about the mammoth spending bill's impact to date. The Free Press' analysis revealed that some stimu- lus money recipients have greatly overstated the number of jobs cre- ated or protected. PESHWAR, Pakistan Militants attack two anti-Taliban figures Militants staged a pair of attacks against anti-Taliban figures in northwestern Pakistan yesterday, killing one of the men as part of an escalating campaign to weaken the country's resolve to fight Islamic extremism. Suspected militants have killed more than 300 civilians and secu- rity personnel in the last month in retaliation for an army offensive launched in the tribal area of South Waziristan, where al-Qaida and Taliban leaders are believed to be hiding. The government has supple- mented its military campaigns by helping tribal leaders and local government officials set up militias to battle the Taliban. The militias, known as lashkars, have been com- pared to Iraq's Awakening Coun- cils, which helped U.S. forces turn the tide against al-Qaida there. As in Iraq, militants in Pakistan have targeted the leaders of such _ groups. " WASHINGTON Dems, GOP split on New York trials of alleged terrorists Bringing those accused in the Sept. 11 attacks to New York for trial wquld increase the security threat to the city and give radical Islamists a platform to propagate their ideology, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani said yester- day. Giuliani's view that the Obama administration is erring in trying Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four others near the site of the World Trade Center was echoed by other Republicans on the Sunday news programs. Democrats defended the deci- sion of Attorney General Eric Holder to try the five in New York where more than 2,000 civilians were killed on Sept. 11. If someone murders Americans in this country, they should be tried in the U.S., said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., chair- man of the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee. FLINT, Mich. Michigan residents may see lower heating, gas costs The Michigan Public Service Commission says Michigan resi- dents could be in store for a cost- efficient winter. The Flint Journal says the com- mission estimates that home heat- ing costs will decline by as much as 16 percent compared with last year due to a mild winter forecast and adequate supply. The panel says last winter was 4.8 percent colder than normal and a return to normal temperatures could reduce monthly heating bills by tens of dollars. The outlook for motorists appears equally favorable. - Compiled from Daily wire reports President takes first China visit An aerial view of the maximum-security Thomson Correctional Facility in Thomson, III. on Saturday. Oficials diOscuss plans to relocate Git-mo inmates Facility 150 miles west of Chicago the primary location of interest CHICAGO (AP) - Gov. Pat Quinn and U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin yesterday tried to build support and counter criticism of a proposal to sell a prison in rural northwest- ern Illinois to the federal govern- ment to house Guantanamo Bay detainees and other inmates. Federal officials are expected to visitthe maximumsecurity Thom- son Correctional Center, about 150 miles west of Chicago, today. Both Quinn and Durbin said the possibility of selling the prison to the federal government was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to help create about 3,000 jobs, both at the prison and directly in sur- rounding communities in an area where unemployment has topped 10 percent. "We have an opportunity to bring thousands of good-paying jobs to Illinois when we need them the most," Durbin said at a news conference in Chicago, one of sev- eral Illinois stops yesterday. "We have an opportunity to bring them to a part of our state that has been struggling and that's an opportu- nity we are not going to miss." Critics, including Republican members of Congress from Illinois and GOP candidates for governor, have been quick to condemn the prospect of the sale because of safety concerns. GOP gubernatorial candidate Andy McKenna said Quinn's plan to cut spending and create jobs includes bringing "terrorists to Illinois." "I wholeheartedly oppose Governor Quinn and President Obama's efforts to move Gitmo detainees to our neighborhoods," McKenna said in a statement. The plan to consider using the Thomson facility was first report- ed by the Chicago Tribune. Thomson has been largely vacant since its construction in 2001 because of budget problems. The prison was built with 1,600 cells, but only about 200 minimum security inmates are held there. Durbin brushed off security concerns, saying convicted ter- rorists are already incarcerated in federal prisons without incident. He said fewer than 100 of the inmates at Thomson would be Guantanamo Bay detainees if the Federal Bureau of Prisons buys the facility. Federal officials would even erect a more secure perim- eter around the prison to beef up security, he added. "We're here today to let the peo- ple know we're not going to let the fearmongers carry the day," Quinn said. "We're going to do things right, the Illinois way." President Barack Obama's administration wants to close Guantanamo Bay, a military run detention center in Cuba, and move the detainees to the U.S. so they can be prosecuted for their suspected crimes. The detainees are alleged ter- rorism suspects who have been held often without charges since the beginning of the war in Afghanistan. Local and state officials will be at Thomson today for an inspec- tion by the Federal Bureau of Pris- ons and Department of Defense representatives. U.S. Rep. Donald Manzullo, a Republican whose district includes Thomson Correctional Center, was invited to today's meeting with federal officials at the prison but he did not plan to attend, his spokesman Rich Carter said Sunday. Manzullo said he adamantly opposes the proposal, despite the jobs it would bring to the area. Federal officials were consider- ing Thomson along with a facility in Florence, Colorado and a site in Hardin, Montana. Some 215 detainees remain at Guantanamo Bay, and Durbin says the administration has talked to other countries about taking some of them. Durbin said he didn't know when the Obama administration would decide, but hoped Illi- nois would have an advantage because of Obama's connection to the state. In Shanghai, Obama to hold talks with local politicians today SHANGHAI (AP) - President Barack Obama is walking a tight- rope on his first trip to China, seeking to enlist help in tackling urgent global problems while weighing when and how - or if - he should raise traditional human rights concerns. Obama arrived in Shanghai late at night, in a driving rain, hustling through a phalanx of umbrella- holding dignitaries to reach his limousine. Today, the president is holding talks with local politi- cians and, in one of the marquee events of his weeklong Asian trip, conducting an American-style townhall discussionwith Chinese university students. Thirty years after the start of diplomatic relations between the two countries, the ties are grow- ing - but remain mixed on virtu- ally every front. The two nations are partnering more than ever on battling global warming,buttheystill differ deep- ly over hard targets for reductions in the greenhouse-gas emissions that cause it: China has supported sterner sanctions to halt North Korea's nuclear weapons program, but it still balks at getting more aggressive about reining in Iran's uranium enrichment. China is a huge and lucrative market for American goods and services, and yet it has a giant. trade surplus with the U.S. that, like a raft of other economic issues, is a bone of contention between the two governments. The two militaries have increased their contacts, but clashes still happen and the U.S. remains wor- ried about a dramatic buildup in what is already the largest stand- ing army in the world. Amid all that, Obama has adopted a pragmatic approach that stresses the positive, some- times earning °him criticism for being too soft on Beijing, particu- larly in the area of human rights abuses and what the U.S. regards as an undervalued Chinese cur- rency that disadvantages U.S. products. Obama recognizes that a rising China, as the world's third-largest economy on the way to becoming the second and the largest foreign holder of U.S. debt, has shifted the dynamic more toward one of equals. For instance, Chinese questions about how Washington spending policies will affect the already soaring U.S. deficit and the safety of Chinese investments now must be answered by Washington. Second, Obama wants not to anger Beijing, but to encourage it to pair its growing economic and political clout with greater lead- ership in solving some of the most urgent global problems, includ- ing a sagging economy, warming planet and the spread of danger- ous weapons. Obama has talked warmly toward China, particularly in the days leading up to his visit. "The United States does not seek to contain China," Obama said in a speech from Tokyo on Saturday. "On the contrary, the rise of a strong, prosperous China can be a source of strength for the community of nations." One test of the line Obama is walking on China will be human rights, including religious free- dominthe officially atheistnation. Aides said in advance that Obama would raise several human rights issues privately with Chinese leaders, including President Hu Jintao. But it was unlikely he would repeat those messages too stri- dently in public, out of concern for angering his hosts. Even before arriving in China, for example, he declined to get specific about human rights concerns with China in his Tokyo speech and eschewed the traditional presi- dential meeting with the Dalai Lama while he was in Washing- ton in June. 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