LPM Online

June 9, 1998

Contents

  1. Upcoming Events
  2. Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life
  3. Down the Sewer
  4. Meeting Cancelled
  5. Student Convention Package
  6. LPMM Meeting
  7. Geoffrey Fieger Seeks Libertarian Voting Block

  1. Upcoming Events

    June 10, 1998 - 6:30 PM
    Meeting - Libertarians of Macomb County
    Location: Fire Station Restaurant, 31185 Utica Road, Fraser (on the southwest corner of Utica Road and Groesbeck, just north of 13 Mile Road.
    Contact: Paul Soyk Phone: 810 977-3523 E-mail: LNUSGMB.ZZYQNH@GMEDS.COM

    June 11, 1998
    Monthly meeting of the LPWM to be held at Brann's
    Location: Brann's on Leonard in Grand Rapids
    Contact: haas Phone:  942 7674 E-mail: haas@iserv.net

    June 11, 1998 - 7:00 PM
    Libertarian Party of Mid-Michigan Monthly meeting. We will be viewing the John Stossel ABC News Special "Sex, Drugs & Consenting Adults."
    Location: Sneeker's Restaurant in Frandor (Lansing).
    Contact: Mike Brinkman Phone: 517 351-0514 E-mail: brinkman98@aol.com

    June 13, 1998 - 7:00 PM
    The Libertarian Party of MidWest Michigan will hold it's monthly meeting at the Kountry Kitchen Restaurant. The Kountry Kitchen is located at 1920 N. Mitchell Street in Cadillac, next to the North End Crystal Flash station. Join us for dinner at 6:00 with the meeting starting at 7:00.
    Location: Kountry Kitchen Restaurant, Cadillac
    Contact: John Willis Phone: 616 775-0187 E-mail: lpmwm@geocities.com

    June 14, 1998 - 1:00 PM
    Libertarian Party of Michigan Executive Committee Meeting
    Location: Home of Keith and Marnie Edwards, 28960 Jane St., St. Clair Shores. Take I-94 to 12 Mile Rd., go east on 12 Mile and turn right on Jane which is one block before the light at Little Mack Ave. The Edwards' home is just past the middle of the first block.
    Contact: Tim O'Brien Phone: 313 562-5778 E-mail: TOBrien321@aol.com

    June 18, 1998 - 6:30 PM
    The VBCLP will host Ken Maxwell of Accutek Inspection Service who will be speaking on "Home Inspection, Public and Private"
    Location: CT's Restaurant (M140 & Blue Star Hwy)
    Contact: Bill Bradley Phone: 616 637-4525 E-mail: bbradley@cybersol.com

    June 18, 1998 - 7:00 PM
    LPSC Monthly Meeting. Guest Speaker: Diane Barnes
    Location: Risto's Bistro, 113 S. Washington, Owosso
    Contact: Ben Steele III Phone: 517 288-5616 E-mail: bsteele1@tir.com

    June 20, 1998 - 10:00 AM
    The Libertarians of Macomb County Adopt-A-Road clean up day. We will be cleaning up our assigned stretch of Metro Parkway, all volunteers are welcome.
    Location: Southwest corner of Schoenherr and Metro Parkway in Sterling Heights (bank parking lot).
    Contact: Rosemary Racchi Phone: 810 776-2214

    June 20, 1998 - 1:00 PM
    The Picnic for the Advancement of Peace, Liberty, and Freedom a fundraising/cookout sponsored by Greg stempfle for State Representative. Admission by contribution to the campaign.
    Location: Ford Field in Dearborn, take Michigan Avenue to Brady and go North until you reach the park. The park is bordered by Brady and Cherry Hill.
    Contact: Greg Stempfle Phone: 313 565-4407 E-mail: gstempfl@sun.science.wayne.edu

    June 23, 1998 - 7:30 PM
    Meeting of the Committee to Elect Diane Barnes to State Board of Education. All people interested in working on this important campaign are encouraged and welcome to attend.
    Location: LCMA Headquarters (also Brass Roots) at at 1035 Hilton Road (West of I-75 between Eight Mile and Nine Mile Roads) in Ferndale.
    Contact: Paul Soyk Phone: 810 977-3523 E-mail: LNUSGMB.ZZYQNH@gmeds.com

    More
    For more events, see the online calendar at:
    http://www.michiganlp.org/lpmonline/events.php

  2. Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life

    The documentary film "Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life" will be showing at the Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor. ( 603 E. Liberty )

    Show times: Sun June 7 at 7:30 PM, Mon June 8 at 7:00 PM, and Tue June 9 at 9:00 PM.

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  3. Down the Sewer by Tim O'Brien

    The following article is this month's installment in LPM Chair Tim O'Brien's OP-ED program and was distributed to newspapers across the state. This article was published in the Detroit Free Press on Monday, June 1, 1998.

    More than three years ago, I began voicing objections at my bi-monthly city council meetings to a Consent Decree entered into by my hometown of Allen Park (along with Belleville, Brownstown, Dearborn Heights, Ecorse, Lincoln Park, River Rouge, Riverview, Romulus, Southgate, Taylor, Van Buren, and Wyandotte) agreeing to spend nearly a quarter of a billion dollars to design and build a new storm drain system for the downriver area to comply with the order of federal Judge John Feikens.

    It seems that on those two or three occasions a year that we get a lot of rain in a short time, the water treatment plant is overwhelmed by the combined volume of both normal wastewater and excessive rainwater. To avoid having raw sewage back up into people's homes when that happens, the rainwater is shunted directly into the Detroit river.

    Now, this may seem quite sensible; obvious, even. However, because the rainwater picks up various and sundry chemical byproducts of our very mobile society as it makes its way off the streets into the storm drains and down to the river, it means that a few stormy days every year our downriver communities go out of compliance with federal EPA limits on how many "parts-per-million" of this or that are permitted to enter the Great Lakes watershed -- on the theory that such excessive amounts of same might be harmful to those who live downstream.

    Of course, raw sewage in your basement is no theoretical harm. And I maintained that the traditional approach to handling these exceptional conditions is the rational one, that a quarter billion dollar upgrade of our storm drain system is a sledgehammer solution to a flyspeck problem when we had far more immediate needs, that the design of local drainage is none of the federal government's business in the first place and that, even if it were a federal concern (i.e., assuming the good people of Cleveland or Buffalo or somewhere else along the way to the Atlantic could show actual rather than hypothetical damages), a judge cannot unilaterally impose a new tax without putting it to a vote of the people in any event since, under the 1978 Headlee Amendment, such would violate our state constitution.

    I regularly waxed eloquent at my city council meetings on the point that while there were numerous instances in which the "Supremacy Clause" of our national constitution had been taken much farther than the drafters could have ever imagined in their worst nightmares, surely stretching it to the point where a federal administrative rule can trump a state's constitution has to be beyond the breaking point.

    I even threatened to assert in court my right not to be handed my "fair share" of the enormous bill for this boondoggle without ever having been afforded the opportunity under Headlee to vote on the question. Everyone on the council, the mayor, our city engineer and city attorneys looked at me as if I were speaking in Martian. It seemed obvious to everyone in the room (except me) that the property tax increase was not a Headlee-limited tax increase but rather an exceptional one necessary to satisfy a judgement, and that, of course, a federal judge could order our city to do anything he deemed appropriate to force us to comply with federal regulations.

    Now comes word that in fact a class action lawsuit has been brought on behalf of the residents of six of the communities affected by the Super Sewer scheme challenging the financing plan in the Consent Decree as -- surprise! -- a violation of the Headlee Amendment. (The exceptions are Romulus and Brownstown which are about to be added, Belleville and Dearborn Heights from which plaintiff/citizens have yet to come forward, and Van Buren, Wyandotte and Riverview -- all of which complied with the Final Judgement without violating Headlee, apparently not an impossibility after all.)

    It turns out that a part of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure says: "The execution of any judgement shall be governed by the laws of the state in which the federal district court sits." There is a 1995 Illinois case called Perkins v. City of Chicago Heights that says: "While parties can settle their litigation with consent decrees, they cannot agree to disregard valid state laws, and cannot consent to do something together that they lack the power to do individually." And there is a 1997 Michigan case called American Axle & Manufacturing Inc. v. City of Hamtramck that says: "Defendants, in levying the judgement tax, are required to comply with the dictates of the Headlee Amendment and submit the proposed tax increase to a vote of the People."

    It also turns out that my city officials had in 1994 agreed to a clause in the Consent Decree wherein they "assured this Court that none of them will hereafter object to the proposed treatment of such Judgement Payments as being in excess of charter, statutory or constitutional limitations." In other words while acting as though they didn't have a clue what I was talking about with regard to Headlee restrictions on this tax increase, they had already explicitly promised the court not to assert those very rights!

    Fortunately, the cities that entered into this agreement are only municipal corporations and as such do not have the authority to waive the constitutional rights of their citizens. Thus, the whole thing will be back in court again on Monday. Though, unless someone has a sudden burst of common sense, the issue will only be finally resolved on appeal.

    There is an ironic postscript for me in this whole situation. It turns out my house does not even connect into the downriver system I'm being tagged $108 a year to upgrade. The wastewater of the northern third of Allen Park -- where I live -- is processed through the Detroit water treatment plant.

    Now you might think I could go into court and petition on behalf of myself and the rest of us living in the unaffected portion of the city to be exempted from this property tax increase on that basis alone. You'd be wrong. Judge Feikens has issued another order enjoining "the parties and their citizens from instituting, appearing in or carrying on any litigation or any administrative proceeding in any court, tribunal or administrative agency which would have the effect of preventing or delaying compliance with the 1994 Financing Plan and Final Judgement," completely barring our access to any forum at all to redress this inequity.

    We were taught from our earliest school days that our republic was founded on the idea that there are limits to all power. Checks and balances, remember? They say even the Lord took six days to create the world. But then, God isn't a federal judge.

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  4. Meeting Cancelled

    The meeting of the Committee to elect Diane Barnes scheduled for Tuesday, June 9 has been cancelled.

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  5. Student Convention Package

    1998 Libertarian Party National Convention $99 Student Package

    By popular request, the Convention organizers are offering a special $99 student package to current college and high school students who wish to attend the 1998 Libertarian Party National Convention, The Road to Victory.

    The convention will be held July 2 - 5, 1998 in Washington, DC at the Washington Convention Center and the Renaissance Washington DC Hotel.

    This package includes a Convention floor pass for all speakers and business sessions, Libertarian Victory Briefings, access to the Exhibit Hall and presentations, convention souvenir and program book, the First Step to Victory kickoff party, and Waco: Rules of Engagement tickets (while supplies last) all at a discount rate!

    Current college and high school students may purchase this special Student Convention Package for only $99. This is a savings of $70 over the lowest-priced regular convention package, so act now, a limited number of packages are available. Call 800-722-5141 or link to the LP website at http://www.lp.org for more information or to register now. Proof of current enrollment required. Lodging and travel assistance not included.

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  6. LPMM Meeting by Mike Brinkman

    I would like to take this opportunity to invite you to the LPMM's monthly dinner meeting. It will be this Thursday at Sneeker's Restaurant in Frandor (Lansing), starting at 7 p.m.

    This month we will be viewing the John Stossel ABC News Special "Sex, Drugs & Consenting Adults." This special features Nadine Strossen from the ACLU and Peter McWilliams, author of "Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do." In this special, John Stossel delivers a 100% libertarian message, and shows how the government is destroying lives through the drug war, seizes property and publicly humiliates people for having sex, and prevents children from getting life saving cancer drugs. All the while, he demonstrates the folly of the government's attempts of controlling our lives and the Hundreds of Billions of dollars wasted in the process. This is one special you won't want to miss. I hope to see all of you there!

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  7. Geoffrey Fieger Seeks Libertarian Voting Block by Doug MacDonald

    Geoffrey Fieger, Democratic candidate for Governor, will be speaking at the Libertarian Party of Oakland County's monthly meeting on Wednesday, June 24, 1998. The Libertarian Party of Michigan will not have a candidate for Governor in 1998. Because we have no candidate, LPers are what is known in politics as a 'persuadable voting block.' Geoffrey Fieger will try to persuade Libertarians to vote for him in the Democratic primary election on August 4, 1998.

    Mr. Fieger is an energetic and entertaining speaker. It will be interesting to hear his arguments and to hear him explain why he is *more Libertarian* than the other Gubernatorial hopefuls. This is a *don't miss it* event!

    The LPOC meeting will be held at Eastside Marios on Southfield Rd., just north of 12 Mile Rd. Dinner at 6; meeting at 7.

    See you there! This should be great fun!

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