Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jan 2000 Source: Ledger, The (FL) Copyright: 2000 The Ledger Contact: P.O. Box 408, Lakeland FL 33802 Fax: 863-802-7849 Feedback: http://www.theledger.com/editorial/letters/letter.htm Website: http://www.theledger.com/ Author: Jenna Deopere The Ledger CITY RESIDENTS PUT DRUG PUSHERS ON SPOT LAKELAND -- Armed with flashlights, bull horns and tenacity, 45 marchers took to the streets Saturday for what they call "taking back their neighborhoods." Three vans full of marchers unloaded at three Lakeland neighborhoods. They stood in front of homes that police identified as known "drug houses" and warned the residents inside, "If you keep selling crack, we'll keep coming back," and "We're gonna be doing this all night long." The city-sponsored march, part of the Turn Around Lakeland program, was the seventh of its kind and by the accounts of organizers and police, the most successful. "This is my sixth march, and each time we come back we see the same thing -- the dealers aren't there the next day," said Alonzo Thompson, a marcher and the city's Weed and Seed coordinator. "This is effective in keeping the dealers moving and that keeps them from getting a foothold in an area and setting up big organizations." On Saturday afternoon, marchers targeted a home on the south side, in the area near Cleveland Height Boulevard and Eastway Drive. Saturday night's march started at Kathleen Road and 10th Street on the north side. The 45 marchers, all wearing matching yellow T-shirts and white hard hats yelled to the people inside a home to stop dealing drugs. "Hi-de-hi-de-hi-de-ho, drug dealers got to go," the group chanted. A few curious eyes peered out from behind the curtains of the home, but no one ventured out to confront the crowd. The Saturday night march continued to another neighborhood, near Brunnell Parkway and Second Street, where the marchers met with more protest. That didn't stop the group from targeting at least five houses. The chanting was relentless. Several residents, mostly women, yelled back from their yards, telling the group to go away. The marchers chanted louder. "Up with hope, down with dope." During the march, which included Lakeland police officers along for protection, one person was arrested on an warrant for violating the city's noise ordinance. As the man sat in the back of the police car the group had a chant for him too: "Stupid, Stupid, how does it feel, sitting in the back of the police mobile." Police say the chanting is working. "We have seen a definite decrease of drugs in these neighborhoods," said Lakeland police Lt. Tom Day. Day said the Paul A. Diggs neighborhood on the north side, designated as a Weed and Seed project area, has shown a noticeable decrease. But some residents of the neighborhoods didn't like the intrusion. One man who was standing in the yard of one of the targeted homes off Brunnell Parkway said he thinks what the group was doing is good in theory, but he was offended that some of his neighbors were targeted - -- erroneously, he said. "I see drugs sold in this area all the time, but it's not to people who live here, it's people who come from other places," said Aaron Henderson, who lives on Edith Avenue. "They need to stop and ask the owners of these houses before they just start yelling at them." The object of the marches is to let the drug dealers know the community isn't going to sit by quietly anymore, said Herman Wrice, a Philadelphia man who started the national program and now travels the country starting groups like Turn Around Lakeland. The city is paying him $21,000 to set up the program in Lakeland. Among the marchers Saturday night was Polk County Commissioner Janet Shearer, who said she would like to see the program expand into the county. "The police and government can't do it all to stop drugs," said Shearer, who sits on the county's Weed and Seed Steering Committee. "The citizens have to be involved. It's nice to see that here." Wrice has supervised six other marches in Lakeland and plans one more before turning the group over to the citizens and police to run. "I could have turned it over to them by the fifth march," Wrice said. "This is the best group I have ever worked with. Lakeland has done more in a short time than any other group in the country." The night march started with about 30 minutes of training. It ended between 9 and 9:30 p.m. when marchers were loaded back into vans and returned to the community center where the night's training started. At the center they were given stickers to put on their white hard hats. On their white hard hats will go stickers, each one representing something different. Each sticker is intended to represent a small victory in the war on drugs and to illustrate how that victory came about. There's a picture of a roach for each time a drug dealer runs away, a light bulb for each time a dealer turns on a house light, even a picture of buttocks for when the marchers are mooned by their intended targets. "The same stickers are used all over the country," Wrice said. "It helps tie us all together." - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson