Pubdate: Thu, 03 Jan 2002 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2002 Charleston Gazette Contact: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77 Author: Greg Stone LAW-ABIDING PROTEST ON THE HILL She used to sit on a crate in her room, high on crack, watching the world go by in her hallway. Janet Thompson had wandered the wilderness most of her life. As a 22-year-old, she served two years and seven months in prison for grand larceny. "I was on drugs and homeless," said Thompson. "I was on drugs when I came up here." "Up here" is Spring Hill Apartments, the 1,500-resident complex perched above Charleston's downtown. Owned by Maryland developer Arnold Karp, Spring Hill is also known as Roseberry Circle, owing to its address. Most of its residents receive rent subsidies from the federal government. Police statistics show it to be plagued by a high number of drug-related offenses. Five years ago, Thompson got off the crate. And crack. "I got tired of being tired," she said. Thompson has instead fashioned a career of sorts for herself, dabbling in legal matters, writing government grant proposals and volunteering at churches. She says she has also attended a career college and real estate school. "I work all the time," she says. "I just don't get paid for it." We should add community activist to her title. She and seven other Spring Hill residents have formed "One Voice" Community Council, an organization designed to bring about change in the project. Chairwoman Thompson and neighbor Bill Garrett helped fire off a letter last month to a slew of officials, including Karp and several U.S. Housing and Urban Development folks. Their complaints are many. They want the project's assistant manager removed. They want a grievance board set up by the end of the month, and an apartment provided, using already acquired Community Development Block Grant money, for a day-care center. "We're a city within a city," says Thompson. "But we have no day care, recreation facilities or meeting rooms." The residents haven't heard anything from management. Karp didn't return a phone message left Wednesday. Garrett, 73, has lived at Spring Hill for nearly 30 years. Like Thompson, he is an ex-convict. A 20-year boxing title-holder in the state of Kentucky, he did 10 years after moving to West Virginia for his role in a 1966 fight. The three of us talked about their efforts Wednesday, in Thompson's busy apartment. Religious and psychological books dot the room, including "The Toltec Way - A Guide to Personal Transformation," an Indian philosophical tome, and "The Science of Mind." Thompson very much describes herself as a Christian, though she feels no need for a church. Garrett, on the other hand, is a broad-shouldered, vigorous fellow who helps pastor New Hope Missionary Baptist Church on Washington Street East. "I tell people, 'Don't do the things I did,' " Garrett said. Garrett is in the minority of residents who don't receive a HUD subsidy. His four-bedroom townhouse rents for $675 a month, plus utilities. Both preach a message of renewal at Spring Hill, an area long maligned for its problems. Together, they guess they've watched 15 young people sent off the hill to prison. "We want to do better," Thompson said. "We want our community to develop." Thompson's far-flung interests - she is taking a computer repair course - include grand plans for Spring Hill. "My goal is to buy the hill," she said. "To use the HUD dollars to let people pay for their apartments. If you own the place you're not going to smoke crack in the hallways. "You're a taxpayer." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens