Pubdate: Wed, 29 May 2002 Source: The Dominion Post (WV) Copyright: 2002 The Dominion Post Contact: http://www.dominionpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1426 Author: Kathy Plum SUNSHINE'S NEIGHBORS LIST THE DARKER SIDE OF FESTIVAL Complain To Preston Commission About Crowds, Noise, Drug Abuse KINGWOOD -- Sunshine Daydream's neighbors complained to county officials Tuesday about noise, traffic, trespassing and drug use caused by the music festival campground. Though County Prosecutor Ron Brown and Sheriff Ron Crites expressed sympathy for their plight, the officials cautioned the property owners that law enforcement is bound by the law when prosecuting offenses. County commissioners asked Brown to look into the new nuisance law counties can pass, wrote the State Police Superintendent to request manpower and discussed contacting Sunshine's owner. It was a return visit for frustrated landowner Kenneth Hubbard, who complained about Sunshine in August 2000. He said Sheriff's Lt. Joe Stiles and then-Chief Deputy Charlie Haney assured him at the time an undercover investigation was under way. He's still waiting for results, and "my wife and I still sit on our front porch and listen to loud music." Hubbard, who owns two restaurants in Baltimore, said young people who work there are familiar with Sunshine as a "mecca" for drugs and music, and have little fear of "the dumb hillbilly police in Preston County." "These kids will stand there in my crab house in Baltimore and say they can come to Preston County, West Virginia, and do whatever they want," Hubbard said. "I don't understand what it's going to take to wake this county up." Hubbard bought 130 acres at Oak Grove before Sunshine was created and made major improvements in order to retire there. He had sold acreage in Roane County after an arsonist burned his mobile home. On Tuesday he pledged to his wife, "If I get us out of this, and we will get out -- it will cost a lot of money -- so help me as God is my judge, we will never step foot in West Virginia again." Three others said they want to stay, but they want protection against trespassing, traffic and other problems caused by Sunshine. James Shillito said commissioners "have forsaken not only me but everyone in Preston County." Shillito, a school bus driver, said he always hopes he'll be able to control his bus when traffic on the Brandonville Pike bound for Sunshine runs him off the road. Ellis Stemple recalled how he and his son detained three people who trespassed on his farm, using it to enter Sunshine Daydream, possibly to avoid the ticket fee. Preston deputies were there twice and ran trespassers off, Stemple said, and his family later found two bags they suspect are drugs in a field. His concern is the damage being done to the land and his possible liability. "They come up there with their beer bottles and beer cans, and you go up there to make hay and it's there," Stemple said. "I'd just like for them to stay (at Sunshine) and leave me alone." Joyce Cotter lives a mile away from Sunshine, in a retirement home she bought in 1995 for the view. She's no stranger to the attraction of drugs, having lived in the 1970s near a Maryland town she said was known as a "drug mecca." "I don't like seeing the Porta Potties. I don't like seeing the plywood lean-tos there. But they have a right. (SSDD owner Trip McClenny) bought the property knowing there was no zoning," Cotter said. "But I don't think they're neighbor friendly, in that I listen to music 24 hours a day." Late-night fireworks, stadium lights that cast shadows in her home at night and hundreds of cars traveling the narrow Oak Grove Road are also a problem, Cotter said. She predicted that a spreading bad reputation for Preston County will deter people from moving here, affecting the local economy. "There is money coming off it, I won't deny it. But is that the kind of money you want?" she asked. But economics can stop the problem, Cotter said. If police make it hard for drug dealers to do business, they'll go away, she said. Hubbard noted Garrett County, Md., police made 13 arrests for drug-related offenses as people leaving the festival traveled through that county. "My hat's off to the folks in Maryland. They have a lot of resources," Sheriff Crites said. Preston has 13 deputies and six State Police troopers. "I'm not sitting here trying to make excuses. We're doing our best to try and get the other agencies involved that have the resources," Crites said. Brown said officers have to follow the law in order to get a conviction. He advised the landowners they might consider a civil suit against Suinshine as well. "When you're doing this to me, you don't have any rights," Hubbard responded. "You're breaking the laws of the state. You're breaking the laws of humanity." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth