Page 22-Thursday, May 8, 1980-The Michigan Daily Blues, UAW panel to create insurance elan for drug abusers LANSING (UPI) _ A special panel including the United Auto Workers, Michigan Blue Cross-Blue Shield, and lawmakers was created yesterday to draw up a hospitalization plan for per- sons who abuse alcohol and drugs. The coalition, similar in form to one which hammered out a measure revamping the Blues, is set to report back to the House Public Health Com- mittee within three weeks. AN ESTIMATED 750,000 persons in the state suffer from addiction to alcohol or drugs. Drug-related illnesses currently account for nearly 20 per cent of all hospitalizations. Lawmakers have talked about in- cluding substance abuse in hospital in- surance plans since 1972, but the con- troversial 'issue never has been dealt with, due in part to the opposition of the Blues and the UAW. However, both the giant health in- surer and the union now support the basic concept of a three-bill package in- troduced by state Rep. David Campbell (R-Clawson).- UNDER THE package, health in- surers must offer their subscribers yearly coverage for alcohol and drug abuse problems. The treatment would inclde a minimum of 14 hospital days, 30 days in halfway houses and 45 hours of outpatient treatment. The UAW currently provides its em- ployees with substance abuse coverage, but the plan is limited and costly. Union officials have been afraid expanding the program could drive up contract costs. Public health committee Chairman Raymond Hood (D-Detroit) said he sympathized with the UAW. "I UNDERSTAND them in as far as they're concerned about negotiating their contracts," Hood said. "That's why I want them to participate." During testimony, a representative of the Michigan Council on Substance Abuse said the state's poor economic situation warrants quick action on the bills. John Nolan told the committee he was unable to find treatment several years ago for his own alcoholism problem. "When I finally went for help, there was no help available," Nolan said. "Basically I was told that unless you're very wealthy or very poor, there's no help available. I got straightened out without any help from the insurance companies - help I desperately needed." Do a Tree a Favor: Recyle Your Daily Ethiopian famine A leaf-thin child cries in a refugee camp for drought victims recently in the Ethiopian province of Gemy Gofa near the Kenyan border. The area has been without rain for more than two years. An estimated 1.5 million people throughout Ethiopia and neighboring countries are now suffering from famine. Council to renew efforts to purchase theater I ntn rmPnl l) (Contznuea trom rage 3 nine per cent. Mayor Louis Belcher also promised skeptical council members that he would raise a $162,000 interest- free loan from private sources to cover. a down payment on the theater. A week earlier, on April 16, council had rejected by one vote changes which included a hike in the bond's interest rate. Approval of the changes at the April 21 neeting took the future of the theater out of limbo and allowed the non-profit group currently operating it to go ahead with plans to raise funds to restore the ornate landmark, which was built in the late 1920s asa vaudeville house. THE BUTTERFIELD Theater Corp., which had operated the building as a movie theater, refused to renew its lease in the spring of 1979, opening the possibility that the theater would be razed and developed into a mini-mall. Efforts to save the theater through the private sector fell through over the summer and in the fall the city stepped in. The city entered into a deal with the building's owners, promising to make a $162,000 down payment - represen- ting 30 per cent of the purchase price of $540,000. Within six months of making the down payment in November, the city was supposed to have sold $540,000 in revenue bonds to cover the cost of the theater. THE DEAL set up in November ran into trouble in April, when the six- month period for selling the bonds ended with the.bonds unsold due to in- flated interest rates. On April 16, a measure to raise the in- terest rates on the bonds from eight to nine per cent failed by one vote in coun- cil. The four dissenting members said they were worried that the city would never be able to sell the bonds and that the city would be saddled with an out- standing loan of $162,000, despite a provision in the deal in which the owners agreed to reimburse the down payment to the city if the bonds did not move on the market. FOLLOWING THAT meeting, Belcher, a strong advocate of the pur- chase plan, vowed to revise the pur- chase agreement and bring it back to council for another vote. What apparently swayed Democrats Ken Latta (D-Second Ward) and Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward) to reverse their positions was Belcher's promise to secure an interest-free loan from private sources to cover the down payment. In the end, only David Fisher (R- Fourth Ward) voted against the pur- chase deal 4 a 4'