Pubdate: Mon, 18 Aug 2003 Source: Sun News (Myrtle Beach, SC) Copyright: 2003 Sun Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/sunnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/987 Note: apparent 150 word limit on LTEs Author: Jacob Jordan, Associated Press REVITALIZATION COMMUNITY TURNS AWAY FROM DRUGS Neighborhood sees bright future FLORENCE - Tim Waters drives down a narrow street in a north Florence neighborhood, where windows and doors of small abandoned homes have been nailed shut with plywood and front porches lean as if they could give way at any moment. "This is like crack haven right here," Waters says of an area of the neighborhood that has been plagued by drugs, homelessness and violence. Just a couple blocks away, Waters and a few others have built new homes on a former "crack street" and children are jumping rope, one sign that part of the neighborhood has become safer. Nearby is a hole-in-the-wall community center where all the improvement started. The center, with an annual budget of $350,000 and six employees, is part of the federal Weed and Seed program, designed to help city neighborhoods address persistent drug-related crime. From this center located in an old strip mall, 28 programs reach out to the community teaching things such as HIV prevention and simple math for children. Kids can come for after-school programs, learn to box or simply enjoy a game of pool or foosball in a safe environment. "People say there's no way in the world that all that's going on," Waters said. The area the center serves has about 9,000 residents, almost all of them black. Waters, 33, said his job as director entails being a friend, confidant, father-figure and counselor and is overwhelming at times. Beyond working with kids in the academic programs, Waters and others hold neighborhood meetings at the center, where folks are urged to talk about potential drug activity or crime. "Nobody wants to be a snitch, but that's the only way you're going to fix the problem," Waters said. Walker Solomon, director of the Florence County Social Services office, is trying to get about 60 volunteers to participate in a program where members from the community act as liaisons between the state agency and families who may have potential cases of abuse and neglect. The volunteers will be trained by DSS, and the program would include agencies such as the Department of Mental Health or the Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services. "Generally, when the Department of Social Services goes to someone's home, it's in regards to getting somebody for child support or responding to a call of abuse-neglect," Solomon said. "I felt that if a neighbor or someone in the community went to a family and approached them with offers of help or assistance that it would be received a whole lot better than DSS." The program is expected to start up in a couple of months. "I don't like the word snitch," Solomon said. "What we're trying to do is help people." But some have reservations about the program. Defense attorney Jack Swerling said he thinks people naturally look for abuse and neglect. "But to go ahead and have people trained by DSS, an agency, to spot those things I think is inciting trouble, and I believe you'd start having a rash of reports that are unfounded," Swerling said. "And that's what causes me concern." Solomon said program volunteers will have to know when to call police. "Sometimes we're going to be wrong," he said. But he hopes mistakes will "be few and far between." While the Weed and Seed program gets a lot of credit for improving the neighborhood, not everyone is thrilled with the program's cameras installed outside the center. "It's like Big Brother's watching, and people don't like that," Waters said. But, for kids such as 10-year-old Demtric Russell, the center is more than just a haven. "You learn more things than regular school," he said. And for neighbors in this reinvigorated community, the shiny new homes along the former crack street are priceless. Annie Briggs, 50, smiles when she talks to Waters about the revitalized neighborhood. "I know how it used to be," she said. "We've come a long ways." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh