Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jun 2000 Source: San Luis Obispo County Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2000 The Tribune Contact: P.O. Box 112, San Luis Obispo, CA 93406-0112 Fax: 805.781.7905 Website: http://www.thetribunenews.com/ Author: Jerry Bunin, The Tribune Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n823/a08.html RESIDENTS CRY FOUL OVER DRUG-TREATMENT HOME City Vows To Keep Neighbors Better Informed Of Similar Projects In The Future Lisa Van Hoosear said she won't let her 11-year-old daughter walk to the bus stop alone if a treatment home for teen-age boys with substance-abuse problems opens in her neighborhood. Linda Harrah, who helped collect 50 signatures on petitions opposing the home, is unhappy with how LifeSteps Foundation and the county notified people about its proposed home. The City Council on Monday agreed to send the county a letter offering to help develop guidelines for improving future communications with residents on similar issues. The county hired the LifeSteps Foundation and contributed $150,000 in start-up funds for a treatment home for boys 13 to 17, that will be at 227 North Eighth St. LifeSteps official Joan McKenna notified the city of the home plans during a public comment period March 20, but didn't say where the home would be. She has since apologized for not including the address and has unsuccessfully tried to assure area residents that the home and its clients will be good neighbors. County official Bill Hallum said the county already is examining ways to prevent this problem from recurring, but is limited by a state law that prohibits local communities from regulating group homes with six beds or fewer. Harrah questioned placing troubled youth directly across from where a children's museum is being developed, near the downtown commercial core Grover is trying to enhance and in a high-density residential area. "This constitutes an overloading of this area, with potential problems for the residents and the Police Department, and it negatively impacts property values ... in the area," she said. McKenna, a statewide vice president for the foundation formed in 1983, said youth in the home will be supervised 24 hours a day and will not be allowed outside on their own until they have shown substantial progress. She said it is important to place the youth "in a community like Grover Beach since it is in such an environment that they will live when they complete their recovery." LifeSteps has been established on the Central Coast for nine years and has three substance-abuse programs in the county - without having had any trouble with the police, she said. "We haven't really experienced any serious concerns with the towns we work in," McKenna said, noting that neighbors are invited to open houses when the facilities open. The Grover home will open in 45 to 90 days. Boys will be placed in the program by the county and will stay between six and 12 months, she said. There will be between one and three staff members on duty per client at all times. Hallum, a division manager for county Drug and Alcohol Services, said, "the county is interested in doing a better job in the future" on helping the homes get started. As a result of issues raised in Grover, the county will develop guidelines for future homes, which will suggest how to build good relations with neighborhoods, he said later. Councilman Ron Arnoldsen summarized the council's reaction about not being notified in advance: "I don't have a problem with the program, but I do with the procedure." Grover Mayor Dave Ekbom reported being unhappy after discovering there was nothing he could do when a similar program moved next to his mother's house a few years ago, but wound up being surprised that things worked out fine. He also suggested that the community will have less to fear from troubled teens being heavily supervised than from unsupervised kids with problems who are living around town. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D