The Michigan Daily-Thursday, June 5, 1980-Page 11
Californians reject
another Jarvis tax
slashing proposition
in 61-39% landslide
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Califor-
nia's defeat of Howard Jarvis' income
tax-slashing scheme looked more like
truce than surrender yesterday in the
tax revolt that began two years ago
with Proposition 13.
State and local government officials
and educators breathed a little easier
when Proposition 9 was buried by
voters Tuesday in a 61-39 per cent lan-
dslide.-
THE MEASURE would have cut the
income tax in half, costing the state
treasury as much as $4.9 billion in the
budget year that starts July 1. Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. has proposed spen-
ding $20.8 billion next year.
Jarvis vowed he would be back with
yet another assault on government
spending, this one aimed at state
government pension funds.
"We're goingtto bounce right back,"
he said in Los Angeles.
TYPICAL OF the reaction among
Jarvis foes was that of David Saxon,
president of the University of Califor-
nia.
"In these economically troubled
times, a majority of the voters in
California chose to forego personal gain
in order to uphold the public interest
and to protect the services that are im-
portant to them," Saxon said in a
statement.
Brown, a leader of the opposition to
Proposition 9, said its loss "means the
tax revolt is not mindless.
BUT THERE were other indications
that Californians aren't eager for the
government to spend more money yet.
They crushed a ballot measure sup-
ported by Brown that would have
authorized the state to issue $495
million in bonds to finance new parks
and use of renewable resources.
They also defeated landlord-backed
Proposition 10, which would have
abolished local rent control ordinances,
and Proposition 11, an effort to impose
a 10 per cent surtax on oil company in-
come to help pay for mass transit
projects.
THE JARVIS measure was in trouble
long before voters cast their ballots.
Public opinion polls showed Califor-
nians had reversed themselves, first
favoring it, then not. Pollster Mervyn
Field said, "When the people are con-
cerned or confused they really go on the
'no' side. To feel safe, they vote 'no'."
The measure was rejected in every
one of California's 58 counties.
By about a 3-1 margin, Californians
approved Proposition 5 which places
the state's "shield law" giving news
reporters the right to protect the iden-
tity of sources they use to gather news
in the state constitution.
AP Photo
TAX CUT CRUSADER Howard Jarvis ponders a;reporter's question during
a Tuesday night news conference in Los Angeles. Jarvis' latest effort to cut
California state income taxes, Proposition 9, was soundly defeated at the
polls. The crusader vowed to place new proposals on future ballots.
Computer to help policeA2
(Continued from Page 3)
able cost. construction and renovation; Digital
Local-based systems can be par- Equipment Corporation, $22,980 per
ticularly helpful in making personnel year for software and maintenance;
scheduling decisions, Krasny said. By Carpenter-Cunningham, $11,600 for air
knowing where crimes occur, for conditioning; Fire Control Inc., $6,085;
example, the department can establish and Foster Flooring, $4,655.
'selective enforcement" routines to
meet the city's needs as fully as
possible, he said. S P
CITIES CONVERTING to local com-
puter systems will not be deprived of
the state's massive information banks,
however. All of the cities have access to
a separate service: the Law En-
forecement Information Network
(LEIN), which provides state-wide in-
formaton for local use.
In addition to the cities currently
changing their information retrieval
systems, Verkaik listed Dearborn,
Grand Rapids, Saginaw, and Berrien
County as other localities planning to
convert from state to local computer
systems.
Krasny said another advantage of Full grain lei
using a local system is having "almost style. Genui
instant information coming back to men and wo
you." He estimated the time it will take _ step with to
for most information requests to be Big on comf
processed at 20 seconds. Unmistakab
THE POLICE chief said police work W OMEN'S
without computers would not be im-
possible today, but "w'd have a lot of MEN'S
information that might not be
retrievable."
Despite the $203,000 grant that will
cover the expense of the computer
equipment, the city must pay out more
than $130,000 to modify the police
station to accommodate the new
system.
City Council approved that expen- 529 E LIBERTY
diture on May 5, after tabling the mat-
ter twice. ANN ARBOR
Contracts for the project were awar- 665-9797
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