Pubdate: Tue, 28 Oct 2003 Source: Orange Leader, The (TX) Copyright: 2003. The Orange Leader and Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. Contact: http://www.orangeleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3054 Author: Royal M. Hopper III RESIDENTS WANT MORE DEALERS BUSTED People At The Mount Zion Baptist Church Orange City Council Neighborhood Meeting Wanted To Talk About Drugs, Drainage And Economic Development, Not Annexation. The first three neighborhood meetings were dominated by people opposed to the possibility of Orange annexing parts of Little Cypress. At this meeting residents told officials they wanted stepped up drug enforcement as a follow up to what they said was a successful series of drug related arrest by Orange police. "Thank you for the drug bust, but they are back and we need more of them," said neighborhood resident Dorothy Pollard. Henry Lowe, a resident of Dewey Street, wanted to know where the drug dealers operating in the city come from. "Ninety nine percent of the drug dealers are from the Orange area, while 80 percent of the customers are from out of town," said Police Chief and City Manager Chief Sam Kittrell. Kittrell said that Orange police has used officers from outside the area, officers the dealers do not know, to make arrests. More undercover investigations are planned for the future. Councilman Charles Guillory told the residents they could come to him to report drug activity if they feared going directly to the police. Kittrell said people reporting drug deals could remain anonymous. Freddy Champine wanted to know what the city was doing to bring back the industries that once dominated the economy and kept the city prosperous. Mayor Brown Claybar said in the current global economy it is difficult to control the factors that attract or repel industries to the area. He said the city had created the Economic Development Corporation has gotten Webco to come to Orange and has plans to attract more. Annexing nearby areas, such as Little Cypress, is also another way to grow the city's tax base. Another is re-negotiating the industrial district contracts that local industries pay instead of taxes. The contracts account for 35 percent of the city budget as opposed to 28 percent for property taxes. Byley Street resident O.D. Simpson said paving roads and improving drainage should be the main priorities of city officials. "The west side of Byley needs paving and they also need to do something about the people stopping in the street there," Simpson said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom