Pubdate: Wed, 12 Nov 2003 Source: Roanoke Times (VA) Copyright: 2003 Roanoke Times Contact: http://www.roanoke.com/roatimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/368 Author: Laurence Hammack Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) BLACK LEADER CALLS DRUG CLINIC 'ECONOMIC RACISM' An angry crowd gathered in the parking lot of a vacant office building Tuesday and vowed to fight plans for a methadone clinic at the Northwest Roanoke site. "We want to send a clear message to the company they are not welcome in Roanoke, Virginia," said Jeff Artis, a community activist leading the opposition. "And if the company is stupid enough to come here, we're going to shut it down." A proposal by National Specialty Clinics to open a methadone clinic at 3208 Hershberger Road amounts to "economic racism," Artis said. But if the company thought a black community would offer the least resistance to a drug treatment center, he said, it will soon discover otherwise. In addition to gathering signatures on petitions and contacting elected officials, some opponents are also willing to go to jail for acts of civil disobedience that Artis said will be part of nonviolent picketing outside the building. "I myself don't have a problem with going to jail to protect my community," Artis told about 50 people who attended a news conference held at the Hershberger Road site to kick off opposition to the clinic. Artis expects trespassing will be the most serious charge to come out of the protests. "There are some very angry people in this community who have been talking about doing some interesting things to the building, and I have tried to persuade them not to," he said. Opponents also plan to take photographs of patients entering the clinic and post them on a Web site if it can be determined they have criminal records. "Some people say, 'Jeff, you can't do that.'" Artis said. "Yes I can, because this is my neighborhood. ... We will send a clear message to these people: Don't be coming around here." Many residents fear that opening a methadone clinic which will draw addicts to the area will also bring crime and drug dealing. Three schools - Westside Elementary, Ruffner Middle and William Fleming High - are located within a mile of the site. Police in other Virginia localities with methadone clinics have reported few problems. But Artis said he has no confidence in the ability of Roanoke city and police officials to prevent an already existing drug problem in the Hershberger Road area from feeding off the clinic's clientele. With the city still refusing to acknowledge a gang problem, "how will they deal with the future problems?" Artis said. Some people have seen the city's quick approval of a business license before plans for the clinic became public - compared to Roanoke County's opposition to a second clinic after a public outcry in the suburbs - as evidence that Northwest Roanoke is being targeted as a dumping ground. "I think it was done under the cover of darkness because this is a black neighborhood," said Lin Johnson, a youth leader at the nearby Garden of Prayer No. 7 Church. The church opposes the clinic because of its proximity to a gymnasium it plans to build for inner-city youths. Artis said he has tried unsuccessfully to contact officials with National Specialty Clinics. David Gnass, chief executive officer of the Nashville, Tenn.-based company, said Tuesday that he was not aware of any such calls. Gnass said that while opposition is regrettable, it will not alter the company's plans to dispense methadone as a form of treatment for addicts of opium-based drugs such as heroin and OxyContin. While Artis agreed there is a need for methadone clinics, he said a hospital setting would be more appropriate than a neighborhood. Artis said he has heard about discussions to put the clinic planned by the Life Center at the Veterans Affairs medical facility in Salem. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl