Pubdate: Mon, 15 Apr 2002 Source: Salisbury Post (NC) Copyright: 2002 Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.salisburypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/380 Author: Scott Jenkins DRUG ABUSERS KEEP KIDS AWAY FROM PARK KANNAPOLIS -- Zuly Rodriguez could heave a rock from her duplex on Wilson Street and come close to hitting a small playground just down the road. But she won't let her kids play there. "She tells us don't touch drugs, that's why we can't go down there," said Philis Rodriguez, Zuly's 9-year-old son who relays questions to his mother in Spanish and translates her answers into English. On a warm and sunny Thursday afternoon, well after school hours, no children climbed, swung or slid on the bright blue-and-yellow equipment in the center of the small lot. Residents on Wilson and adjoining streets -- part of the James Street Community -- say the concern over drug use on and around the playground keeps them and their children away. City parks officials share those concerns. At it's March meeting, the Kannapolis Parks and Recreation Commission agreed to ask police to step up enforcement around the small park. Police Chief Paul Brown says his department is "doing everything within our lawful authority, and within our resources" to combat drugs in the community. "We've been working very aggressively over there the last two years," he said. "We've been very effective, but we haven't been very visible with it." In addition to regular patrols, the department maintains an office in the community and has assigned an officer to the James Street neighborhood to provide residents a familiar face and make it easier for them to work with police. That's worked, with residents helping police target specific drug dealers, Brown said. And investigators have run undercover operations to arrest people buying and selling drugs in the neighborhood. But Brown said police have received only three drug-related calls near the playground since January 2000. And he said the park itself is not the problem. "It's a victim of its location," he said. The James Street Community Park sits near the bottom of a hill near where Wilson Street dead-ends at a wooded area. One house sits between the park and the woods, with two more across the street. Surrounding streets are lined with small, modest houses and rental duplexes. A couple of years ago, the city condemned and demolished a two-story apartment house on the lot that was a source of drug dealing and violent crime. The city installed the playground as a goodwill gesture to the community. But drug problems can't be carried away with demolition debris. And the park has been a hangout for at least some who wanted a quiet place to drink alcohol or take drugs, Parks and Recreation Director Gary Williams said. Mills said he has found empty beer cans, wine bottles and the remains of marijuana cigarettes in the small park. "Drug usage is an issue in and around the park," Mills said. He added that the problem is "not so much the park, it's the area around it." He believes the problem "has gotten better recently than what it had been." Brown said police will continue attacking the crime, with the help of a "good neighborhood filled with good people." "It is a problem that does not lend itself to a simple and quick solution,"he said. "But the problems are being addressed by us." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth