Pubdate: Mon, 02 Dec 2002 Source: Mobile Register (AL) Copyright: 2002 Mobile Register. Contact: http://www.al.com/mobileregister/today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/269 Author: Joe Danborn DRUG SUMMIT TO LAUNCH NEW INITIATIVE Seeking input for a landmark Drug Enforcement Administration initiative in Mobile and Prichard, Special Agent Micah Miller started meeting with people who live in some of the area's toughest neighborhoods. Four dozen concerned citizens came to the Dotch Community Center in Trinity Gardens in north Mobile one evening in early November to tell Miller just what it's like to see dealers daily on street corners and in dark parking lots. About the same number appeared a week later to paint a similarly unsettling picture for Miller at Taylor's Chapel Christian Methodist Episcopal Church in the Alabama Village area of Prichard. But when Miller arrived for the third meeting, at Pleasant Grove Baptist Church in Prichard's Snug Harbor community, nobody had to tell him he was at the right place. "Nobody showed up," he said. Neighborhood leaders later told him people there simply do not leave home after dark. Following a joint request by government leaders in Mobile and Prichard, DEA officials have selected the two cities as the fifth site nationwide for the new program, an ambitious venture aimed at curbing drug abuse and crime throughout entire cities. Existing sites include Allentown, Pa., North Charleston, S.C., Portsmouth, Va., and Springfield, Mo. Dubbed IDEA, for Integrated Drug Enforcement Assistance, the year-old program blends enforcement with treatment, counseling and other measures, and could mean a leg up for the Mobile area in securing federal grants. Administrators have not set aside grant money for the program, but the DEA is to serve as a broker between citizens and the organizations that can fund particular projects. For the DEA -- an agency whose name conjures images of undercover agents infiltrating Latin American cartels to set up massive stings -- the program represents unprecedented attention to the drug problem on a local level. "DEA has never partnered this closely with the community, and it's a good fit," said the DEA's Pam Brown, the program's coordinator in Washington. "We recognize that law enforcement is necessary. We also recognize that we can't arrest our way out of this problem." Miller and others involved with the new program have met with residents in Mobile's Roger Williams community in addition to those in Trinity Gardens and Alabama Village. And the Snug Harbor meeting has been rescheduled for 6 p.m. Tuesday, only this time it is to take place at the A.J. Coo-per Municipal Complex. The neighborhood meetings are being held in anticipation of a comprehensive drug summit Dec. 11-12 at the Arthur R. Outlaw Mobile Convention Center downtown that will signal the program's launch. Officials with the National Crime Prevention Council, which has partnered with the DEA, will facilitate the conference. DEA chief Asa Hutchinson is scheduled to attend, along with leaders from law enforcement, government, churches, business, neighborhood associations and social service agencies in both cities. Registration is open but must be done in advance, as the conference has a 300-person limit. While all the advance meetings took place in public housing areas, IDEA is designed to generate plans to serve as models for neighborhoods in all corners of Mobile and Prichard, organizers said. That scope, primarily, is what sepa-rates IDEA from similar initiatives like the Justice Department's Weed and Seed program, which focuses on individual neighborhoods, DEA officials said. "Drug addiction is not unique to housing communities," Mobile City Councilman Thomas Sullivan told residents at the Roger Williams meeting last week. "You can go to west Mobile, east Mobile, south Mobile or north Mobile and find people with addiction problems." Beyond addiction and trafficking, organizers hope to motivate residents and city officials to address root causes of drug crime and abuse -- truancy, poverty and family problems, to name a few. "Most of your drug dealers are not straight-A students who wake up one day and decide, 'You know, I want to get into a life of drugs,'" Miller said. "There are social problems that guide them into that. And so that's what we're trying to get at, not just the drugs." Miller opened each meeting by trying to ease suspicions in the room. "I'm not here to put anybody into jail. I'm not here to get drug information from you," Miller said at the Roger Williams meeting. Miller, whose assignment as program coordinator leaves the DEA with four field agents in Mobile, characterized the public response so far as surprised, but positive. "The thing that we have going for us is that DEA has never gone into a community and said, 'What can we do to help, besides enforcement?'" he said. For information on Tuesday's meeting or next week's summit, contact Miller at 340-3615 or For information on the IDEA program, visit www.usdoj.godeprogramidea. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)