Pubdate: Sat, 15 Dec 2001 Source: Bristol Press (CT) Copyright: 2001, The Bristol Press Contact: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?brd=1643 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/569 Author: Olivia L. Lawrence CLINIC PLAN PROVOKES DISBELIEF, SURPRISE BRISTOL -- Reaction from neighboring businesses and residents to a Farmington Avenue methadone clinic, which is scheduled to open early next year, ranged from disbelief and surprise to no comment. "It's just not right," said Solange Sirois, whose Elizabeth Road home is to the rear of the clinic. "There should have been a petition or some discussion," she said. "I can't believe it." "Was there a vote?" asked Loukesha Ray, whose home on Stafford Avenue also overlooks the clinic site. "The way this was handled -- there was no community involvement to say the least." "This is not the place for it," said Joanne Jacquemin, who runs a hairdressing shop next door to the clinic site. "It shouldn't be here next to businesses. It should be connected with the hospital."Jacquemin said she has a large number of older people using her services and she is concerned about how the methadone clinic clientele will mix with her customers. A stateauthority on methadone, however, offered a more reassuring assessment. "They [neighbors] need to understand these are people in treatment and not hanging around," said Sam Segal, senior clinical officer and policy officer of addiction services for the state's Department of Mental Heath and Addictions Services. With methadone it is very unlikely they will be using other substances. In terms of community education, people have prejudices and don't respond to accurate information. [A community] needs to provide appropriate access for behavioral health treatment. At some point they will accept it," Segal said use of opiates has been increasing since 1997 and street heroin has gotten cheaper. Segal said existing clinics are overcrowded. "We are not importing addicts" from other areas, Segal said, explaining clients have a right "to move to their home community [for treatment] and the community has a responsibility to allow treatment and not ship them out." Two national businesses will have operations near the clinic, including one that has not started building. "We are used to operating in many diverse communities," said a spokesperson for Home Depot from headquarters in Georgia. The chain plans to open a store across from the clinic sometime in the fall of 2002 and the company's representative said decisions to build new stores are based on where the customers are perceived to be. Kindercare Learning Centers, with headquarters in Oregon, has a daycare program a few doors away from the clinic. A spokesperson with that company said it has no comment. "It came about in a surprise fashion," said Tim Chapulis said who owns Tim's Antiques about a block west of where the clinic is. Chapulis called the methadone clinic "an instant disruption of the neighborhood." "As a business man and a property owner, I do not think the clinic is in the best interests of the city and the neighborhoods," Chapulis said pointing out the healthy economic climate along the west end of Route 6 in Bristol. "It doesn't fit ..in this retail -oriented" area, Chapulis said. A hospital setting or area with "more guidance" would make more sense, he said. If there is a public information meeting and enough people show up, the Hartford Dispensary "might rethink its location," Chapulis said. "They didn't ask for input from the area residents and businesses and property owners. People do not have a lot of knowledge and it is a big mistake. It was one of the least uses for the area. I don't see it as anything as a business person that it would help and that is sad," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom