Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 Source: Messenger-Inquirer (KY) Copyright: 2002 Messenger-Inquirer Contact: http://www.messenger-inquirer.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1285 Author: Joy Campbell POLICE CHIEF VOWS TO CONTINUE TO WORK TO STOP DRUG ACTIVITY Continuing to have a police presence at Kendall-Perkins Park is critical to controlling illegal drug activity on Owensboro's northwest side, and residents must not turn the other way when they observe such activity. The Northwest Neighborhood Alliance and acting Police Chief John Kazlauskas appeared to agree on those key assertions at the neighborhood board's monthly meeting Monday afternoon in the Audubon Area Community Service board room. "I'm here to assure you that the ties you had to Chief Allen Dixon will not break," Kazlauskas said. "We will build on the relationships he started." Dixon, who initiated community policing in the city, cited personal reasons for resigning earlier this year. He has accumulated vacation time and officially remains on the city's payroll until Sept. 1. Kazlauskas said Owensboro police can pinpoint the drug activity, contain it and move it out, but it cannot rid the neighborhood of criminal behavior without help from the residents. The acting chief gave the neighborhood group credit for helping the street crimes unit in its recent undercover operation at the Fifth Street park, which led to at least a half dozen arrests for drug trafficking. "You need to continue to write down license numbers and videotape these incidents and share that with us," he said. Community policing involves getting police officers back on the streets in neighborhoods, Kazlauskas said. "There's no blueprint for it -- we'll be developing our own plan, and communication will be the key." Kazlauskas said in two to three months he hopes to open new lines of communication with a Citizens Advisory Board comprised of representatives from each neighborhood advisory board. This group will meet with OPD staff and identify new ways to approach problems. "I make no promises, but I'll work hard, and together we can solve some of our problems," the chief said. OPD will continue to conduct undercover operations and will not "back off from what's been accomplished," he said. Board Member John Garvin asked Kazlauskas if OPD is staffed adequately for the population. "Do we need to be talking to City Commission candidates about where they stand on the need for more police officers?" Garvin asked. Kazlauskas said he would take all the officers he can get, but the key to controlling crime is in the community's response. "Right now we have people looking the other way, and we need to change our environment." Board Member Crystal Adkins said after the meeting that she was worried about losing community policing and was glad to hear Kazlauskas' pledge to continue it. "That was really a Dixon brainchild," Adkins said. "I'm looking forward to working with the new Citizens Advisory Board he (Kazlauskas) talked about. The neighborhood boards had discussed that concept ourselves because we discovered we had similar problems." Adkins said when four members of the alliance went to see Dixon several months ago, he told them the residents had to take responsibility for their neighborhoods. "It was a little easier to swallow today when we heard it," she said, "because we also know we need that police presence." The neighborhood's partnership with OPD can solve the illegal drug problems the neighborhood faces, said Bill Dixon, the executive director of the Owensboro Human Relations Commission, another invited guest at the meeting. In the past, residents have voiced concerns over the lack of police presence in the neighborhood and then others responded negatively when police began making arrests, Dixon said. "You arrest people who violate the law, and it has nothing to do with race or gender," Dixon said. "I think the partnership with the police can solve the problems." Dixon, who lives in Henderson, cited progress that city has made in addressing similar problems. Adkins said she hopes the neighborhood can reclaim the park and help parents overcome the fears they have of taking their children there. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth