Pubdate: Sat, 24 Jun 2000 Source: Fayetteville Observer-Times (NC) Copyright: 2000 Fayetteville Observer-Times Contact: P.O. Box 849, Fayetteville, North Carolina 28302 Website: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/foto/ Forum: http://webx.fayettevillenc.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX Author: Allison Williams RURAL COMMUNITIES NOT IMMUNE FROM DRUG PROBLEM BUNNLEVEL -- Jack used to knock on his neighbors' doors, asking for money to buy more crack cocaine. They gave it to him because they knew him. They eventually stopped because Jack came by time after time. He has been addicted for six years. Some days, he is barely able to look at a picture of his father, he is so ashamed. The picture shows his father in Vietnam, the day before he died in the Tet offensive. Jack looks at that photo and wonders to himself, "How can you let something like this destroy you?" Jack says, "If you want to live in hell on earth, pick up a rock of cocaine." Jack's story is an example of how drugs are reaching not just into the streets of the bigger cities, but into small towns and communities. In Bunnlevel, an unincorporated community, not a town, residents do not have the weapons to fight back. They do not have their own police force. They do not have easy access to counseling services. "No cops, no substation, why not?" said Ellen Fay, a cook at the Bunnlevel Grocery & Grill. About 150 people live in the center of Bunnlevel. About 1,000 others live on the farms and in the small neighborhoods nearby. It is 20 miles to Fayetteville and 10 miles to Lillington. Residents say the country gives drug dealers a place to hide. Many people are afraid to report them to police. Bobby Johnson said he had no choice. He lives in the Flatwoods community, two or three miles north of Bunnlevel. He keeps a miniature New Testament in his shirt pocket. When a neighbor shot at him, he tucked police officers' business cards between the pages of Acts. His hands shake when he turns the tattered pages. "I expect to be shot again any day," Johnson says. "It makes me mad and it scares me, too." A man with glazed eyes shot at him in his own back yard. The shots missed Johnson but they left pockmarks in the side of his trailer. Johnson says the man was high on drugs. He says he has seen neighbors load drugs into cars. He says drug dealers are "in the country more than in town. They know they can get away with it in the country." Sheriff's deputies arrested a man and charged him with shooting at Johnson. And deputies have taken other steps to combat drug activity around Bunnlevel. They closed a store called Tony's Place. Police reports say that an undercover officer bought drugs there. Since January, deputies have investigated 10 incidents of reported drug use in Bunnlevel. "I don't see Bunnlevel as any worse than any other community in our county," said Maj. Steve West of the Harnett County Sheriff's Department. But crime reports on drug charges may not tell the entire story. Drugs breed thieves Sgt. Paul Hinson of the Cumberland County Narcotics Bureau says a majority of break-ins are drug-related. In recent months, Bunnlevel has had a rash of break-ins and has had some robberies. The most recent came when a man tried to rob the Bunnlevel Grocery & Grill. Workers said he was on drugs. Before that, in May, police in Harnett and Cumberland counties charged four men with three robberies in the Bunnlevel area. In February, five Cumberland County men were charged with breaking into dozens of homes under construction and stealing appliances and fixtures. Detectives said the break-ins may have been going on for years in the two counties. Sgt. Hinson says people steal to pay for their drug habit. It is a pattern that Jack, the Bunnlevel addict, knows well. Since he began using cocaine, he has been charged with larceny, drunken driving and assault. He has been in jail 10 different times. Now, he faces charges of drunken driving and felony larceny. He says cocaine has stolen his life. "You want to put your arms around your little boy and little girl and feel like a normal person again," he says. People who study drug use by children in rural communities say many people still have the idea that life in small communities is not marred by urban problems. "It's kind of one of those myths that rural areas don't have drug problems," said Melinda Pankratz, a doctoral student who is studying the effectiveness of school programs on drug abuse. "They often have drug problems as much as our cities." She works with Professor Denise Hallforf in the School of Public Health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. But unlike bigger cities, smaller communities may have more power to change, says another researcher, Ruth Edwards. Edwards and others at the Tri-Ethnic Center for Prevention Research at Colorado State University are studying drug abuse in 260 small communities. "The positive side of this problem is that rural communities have more of an opportunity to do something about it," she says. Edwards says small towns should capitalize on what they have -- close-knit communities where families have lived for generations. "They have to change it from a secretive, 'Let's don't tell anybody,' to 'We all know about it. Let's solve the problem."' The Rev. Roy McLamb and the Rev. Steve Gordon are trying. "I could not tell you the number of people in our church," who have struggled with drugs, says McLamb, the pastor of Flatwoods Community Baptist Church. They come to his church because they know they will be accepted. McLamb was hooked on drugs until the age of 38. "I ran $100,000 worth of cocaine through my veins," he said. At 38, he saw hell, he says. "When I woke up at 2:30 that Saturday morning, I realized there was a literal hell and realized it would be worse than anything I could see as a drug addict." Anti-drug advocate He went to church the next day. But it was too late to save McLamb from jail. After his release from a prison in Sanford, he went back the next day as a prison chaplain. He visited almost every jail in North Carolina. Now, his story is "part of my past and I use it for the glory of the Lord." The Rev. Steve Gordon is pastor of Friendship Baptist Church in Bunnlevel. He has worked at other churches in Fayetteville, Raleigh and Greensboro, but he never saw so many people struggling with drug addiction as he did when he took the job at Friendship Baptist. Gordon hopes he and McLamb and other ministers will work together to heal the people who have come to them. Jack says he talks to God every day. "There's good and evil happening here," he says. "Don't tell me the devil isn't cocaine." - --- MAP posted-by: greg