Pubdate: Fri, 01 Feb 2002 Source: The Post and Courier (SC) Copyright: 2002 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Jason Hardin ANTI-CRIME PLAN FOCUSES ON UPGRADE IN QUALITY OF LIFE Several Charleston City Council members put forward a plan Thursday that would address the city's recent run of killings by tackling economic disparities they argue are the root causes of violence. Raising the quality of life in the city's poorer communities is just as important a crime-fighting tool as a stepped-up police presence or more frequent drug raids, they said. "We can Band-Aid the problem but if we do not go to the root, we will not have real solutions, long-term solutions for the community," said City Councilman Kwadjo Campbell. "We will continue to suffer in the 21st century." Specifically, Campbell and four other councilmen are proposing a set of policy changes and suggestions that they plan to put before council during the next few months. The package includes ideas such as: . Giving priority in affordable housing projects to low-income residents who make below 80 percent of the median income in the area. . Spanning the "digital divide" they said exists between wealthier and poorer communities. This would be accomplished by tapping private donors for contributions that would provide laptop computers to students in poorer neighborhoods and modernize computer labs in peninsula schools. . Taking a closer look at the need for improvements to parks, streets and sidewalks and drainage systems in poorer neighborhoods. . Spending $100,000 in federal Community Development Block Grant money to train young men and women in trades such as carpentry and plumbing. . Using CDBG funds to provide loans to women- and minority-owned businesses in poorer neighborhoods and to guarantee construction loans to developers of affordable housing. . Encouraging the Medical University of South Carolina's Department of Psychiatry to put an emphasis on working with troubled youth in the community. "The problem is clinical as well as criminal," Campbell said. The councilmen made the pitch at City Hall to an audience of two dozen black leaders that included neighborhood presidents, pastors and state representatives. Campbell asked that they support the agenda by lobbying other members of council as well as people in their community. He said the package isn't likely to pass unless it has broad support. "We will have to lobby, we will have to push it. This is not a cakewalk," he said. "What we are presenting ... is an unprecedented agenda." City Councilman Wendell Gilliard, who along with councilmen Jimmy Gallant, James Lewis and Robert Mitchell is also pushing the package, said that the agenda is not driven by race. "This is not just about black African-Americans, it's about the human race," he said. "This is about social and economic injustice." Those attending made several suggestions, such as finding ways to get more parents involved in school issues and investigating whether banks are giving minority borrowers adequate access. City Councilman James Lewis said he knows someone who planned to develop apartments in the East Side neighborhood but was turned down for a loan because of trivial issues in his credit history. "Are they redlining us? We need to find out," he said. Comparatively little of the discussion directly involved the recent string of murders that culminated in January's slayings of a policeman and a rescue worker. But Lewis credited the city's police department for stepping up efforts to crack down on the street-level drug dealing many blame for generating more serious problems. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart