~Ie1MidCiIyan 0aIj ..N 1J-II. AN i 7~j/i 7l I) I X\ I N I .{. l y P.. ?itI .Xl .S l l e. Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, September 26, 2011 FETTVAL TF TITTES michigandaily.com FEDERAL LEGISLATION Young adults with health coverage up by 900,000 Engineering junior Christopher Fair flies a kite at the New Millenium Kite Festival, which was sponsored by the University's Center for Chinese Studies and the Con- fucious Institute at the University, in Nichols Arboretum yesterday. The Kite Festival was part of the 50th anniversary celebration of the Center for Chinese Studies. UNIVERSITY HEALTH SYSTEM U'pathologists to partneulr SWit Waynet C ounty. morgue Gov't officials, 'U' professors attribute increase to health care law By ANDREW SCHULMAN Daily StaffReporter The number of young adults with health insurance increased by almost a million in the past year. Approximately 900,000 people under age 26 became insured between January 2010 and March 2011, according to data released last week by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The increase, which outpaced last year's U.S. Department of Health and Human Services projections, lowered the rate of uninsured 18-to-25 year olds from 28 per- centinthethird quarter of2010 to 24.2 percent in the second quarter of 2011. Last week, members of the Obama administration attrib- uted the increase to a provision in the Affordable Care Act that allows young adults to remain on their families' insurance policies as dependantsuntil age 26 This provision went into effect on Sept.23, 2010. While the suggestion that the Affordable Care Act direct- ly caused the rise in the number of insured young adults has not been proven, Kathleen Sebe- lius, secretary of the Depart- ment of Health and Human Services, said the U.S. Census Bureau's data is evidence that the legislation is working. "The Affordable Care Act has made the health care sys- tem better for millions of Americans," Sebelius said. "This law is helping to give hardworking families the security they deserve and stop insurance company abuses, hold down insurance premi- ums and strengthen Medicare." University professors point- ed to the reduced number of uninsured Americans in all other age groups and the cor- responding time of the enact- ment of the health care law as See HEALTH, Page SA UMHS deal to save county $1.5 million in three years By CLAIRE HALL Daily StaffReporter Due to a shortage of patholo- gists in Detroit, the University has stepped in to help balance Wayne County morgue's bur- geoning caseload. The University of Michigan Health System and the Wayne County Medical Examiner's Office finalized a three-year partnership recently making WCMEO's forensic patholo- gists - the doctors who conduct autopsies - employees of the University. Wayne County, which has suffered budget cuts in recent years, required more patholo- gists to conduct about 2,500 autopsies that come through the morgue annually, according to WCMEO spokesman Dennis Niemiec.,The WCMEO current- ly has five forensic pathologists, but the office needs a total of eight doctors, according to Nie- miec. "It was becoming difficult to recruit them because nationally there's a shortage of forensic pathologists," he said. However, UMHS can assist in the recruitment trdcess. The University has the ability to draw top-level candidates with name recognition and higher salaries, Niemiec sal. He added that the University can pay pathologists up to $ 60,000 a See MORGU E Page 5A ANN ARBOR PUBLIC TRANSIT AATA proposes to expand services between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor Transit authority also planning new airport shuttle service to DTW By ADAM RUBENFIRE Daily StaffReporter The Ann Arbor Transit Authority's constituents might find they have more efficient travels between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti in upcoming years. AATA spokeswoman Mary Stasiak said the transit author- ity is responding to people's needs by proposing to expand its services in the next few years. In addition to extending some of its current services between the two cities, AATA is also proposing several new services including a shuttle to the Detroit Metro Airport. Due to a long-time demand, the AATA has proposed expanding its bus service along Washtenaw Avenue, otherwise known as Route 4, Stasiak said. AATA will also be expand- ing Night Ride, a late-night shared taxi service that cur- rently operates within Ann Arbor. With the changes, the service would expand to areas in Ann Arbor Township and Ypsilanti. While AATA consid- ers its services at peak com- muting hours to be sufficient, the expansion of Night Ride was prompted by residents' varying schedules, according to Stasiak. "There's still a lot of people who have different schedules See AATA, Page 5A LOCAL BUSINESSES With building sold, White Market owners unsure about lease renewal Michigan football coac Brady Hoke embraces San Diego State coach Rocky Long after Saturday's game. This wasn'tjust another gmefor Hoke M ichigan coach Brady overs and emotion for one of the first Hoke stood at mid- he'll answer times. Those talks and hugs field, h ging each that his were real. San Diego State pl r that pl-ayers are "That part of it is I guess, walked in his direction. He on scholar- beinga human being and there's talked with each one just long ship to play a love that you have for those enough for another to make his defense at guys that you've coached and way over. Michigan. MICHAEL you've been around," Hoke said In a robotic profession, Hoke Every single FLOREK after the game. is at the top of the class. His injured play- Hoke was coaching against coach-speak is impeccable. er is feeling his friend, Rocky Long. The two There is no emotion or insight good and "should" be available spent four years together at Ore- in Hoke's answers, he just plows to play. gon State in the early 1990s and through them. Ask him about But standing there after beat- for the past two years together not giving up points after turn- ing the Aztecs, Hoke showed See FLOREK, Page 5A 62-year-old store's lease expires at the end of this year By CHELSEA LANDRY For the Daily Ann Arbor's 62-year-old grocery store, White Market, faces an uncertain future since the building that has served as home to the shop recently changed hands. Dave Jones and his wife Dar- lene, owners of White Market for more than 27 years, con- firmed last week the building has been sold. The Joneses said they have not yet decided if they will renew the lease for White Market, which expires at the end of this year. "We're not making any plans beyond that," Dave Jones said. He added that he met with the new building owner last week but still has not reached a decision regarding his busi- ness's future. "A lot depends upon what the new landlord says," Jones said. The 6,500-square-foot See WHITE MARKET, Page 5A i WEATHER HI: 65 GOT A NEWS TIP? 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