Pubdate: Sun, 16 Mar 2003 Source: Tacoma News Tribune (WA) Copyright: 2003 Tacoma News Inc. Contact: http://www.tribnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/442 Author: Kris Sherman; The News Tribune DRUGS IN THE OPEN Open drug dealing and drug use along Tacoma Avenue South are driving customers away from businesses, scaring patrons of the city's main library and frightening workers as they walk to and from their jobs. The problem of drug dealers hassling people at the Tacoma Public Library is so severe, library director Susan Odencrantz wants a $100,000 security plan to combat it. She will ask the library board Wednesday to consider cutting hours, buying fewer books or dipping into a trust fund to pay for more guards. Some angry business owners say they've all but stopped calling police when they see drug dealing in front of their stores because the lawbreakers are gone by the time officers arrive. "I walked up to the library the other day, and on the way, I witnessed three drug deals," said attorney David N. Land, who has an office at 1326 Tacoma Ave. S. "I don't know what the police are doing to solve the problem if it's that bad." Sonya Kellems and Ronica Brown, who soon plan to move their families into neighborhood apartments, decided last Monday police needed their help "to clean up the trash" - both human and material. The pair showed up at the corner of South 13th Street and Tacoma Avenue South waving hastily made posters with the hand-lettered messages, "No More Drugs!!!" and "Mothers Against Drugs." "I came down here (to the convenience store) with my children this morning, and I saw four people in this doorway smoking crack," Kellems said. "My children shouldn't have to know what cocaine is." Kellems has three children, ages 3, 5 and 8, while Brown is the mother of five kids ranging in age from 9 to 17. The two brought their cell phones along on their poster-waving mission, frequently calling police to describe drug deals going down. "They came and arrested four of them," Brown said of the drug users. The two also swept food wrappers, beer bottles, used needles, spent condoms and other dangerous material off the sidewalk. "We're as frustrated as the business owners are," admitted Lt. Fred Scruggs, Tacoma police Sector 1 commander. The dealing sometimes goes on right in front of the County-City Building, home to Tacoma police administration and the Pierce County Sheriff's Department, some say. Officers often can be seen cruising the area, working special emphasis patrols and busting drug dealers. But Scruggs lamented, "The problem is a little bit bigger than we are." Police, prosecutors and other officials talked about action plans and possible solutions with scores of concerned business owners and representatives of the social and public service agencies that line Tacoma Avenue South during a meeting last month. Attorney John Spencer, Land's partner, wasn't impressed. Thieves recently kicked in one of their windows, stole a computer and ransacked files. Many of the people at the meeting "felt the police department didn't have an answer for their inability to control the problem," Spencer said. Calls for service along Tacoma Avenue South between South Seventh and South 23rd Streets rose 21.6 percent from 2000 to 2002, police statistics show. Narcotics calls were up 40.6 percent. Arrests for drug offenses were up 80.5 percent from 113 in 2000 to 204 in 2002. The dealing and use of crack cocaine, methamphetamine and black tar heroin picked up along Tacoma Avenue South over the last year and grew even more frenetic during the last three or four months, business owners complain. No one knows exactly why Tacoma Avenue South has become a stop-and-shop for drugs, but police, business owners and social service workers speculate that a growing population of homeless people in the area makes it easy for dealers and users to blend into the loitering crowds. In addition, several agencies that serve society's homeless, jobless and mentally ill line that stretch of Tacoma Avenue South. Dealers are always around when the food stamps come out, attorney Spencer said. Police, meanwhile, complain that the overcrowded, overwhelmed jail and court system, housed in the County-City Building, frequently spits out dealers and users on bail before the cops who arrested them can finish their paperwork and get back on the street. Whatever the cause, business owners and others say, the drug dealing is a needle-sharp lance rapidly puncturing the neighborhood's economy and security: * Dwindling customer numbers forced Nancy Hiller, owner of the Acme Tavern at 1310 Tacoma Ave. S., to hang out the "closed" sign on Saturdays and Sundays for the first time in 33 years. Hiller, who also cut back daily hours, figures her business is down about 50 percent. * Helen Myrick, executive director of the Greater Pierce County Community Network, described scenes reminiscent of the Wild West after she tramped around the area to do a homeless count in January. "I saw people selling drugs, getting into their cars and shooting up and a lot of prostitution without worry of law enforcement," she said. * Maintenance crews pump library restroom plumbing every few weeks to clear pipes clogged with hypodermic needles dumped by drug users who shoot up in the stalls, said library director Odencrantz. Library security guards routinely escort skittish patrons and employees the half-block from the front doors to the parking lot entrance. Many of the dealers are young, aggressive and fearless, Odencrantz told City Council members during a recent study session. "The last time I confronted somebody, the mirrors on my car were smashed," she said. Officers in marked cars and unmarked cars, on bicycles and on foot regularly patrol the area, Scruggs and Tacoma police spokesman Jim Mattheis said. They conducted several special missions over the last two weeks, Scruggs said. Undercover narcotics cops wander along Tacoma Avenue South and through adjacent alleys and vacant lots when schedules and staffing allow it. But budget cuts and retirements sliced the Tacoma police ranks in recent years, and the losses haven't been made up, Mayor Bill Baarsma said. "We have 35 positions vacant in the police department," he said. "The good news is, we now have money in the budget to fill those positions." But he said police have had trouble recruiting officers. Baarsma knows first-hand of the problem's severity. He said he saw a drug deal while walking from the parking lot to the library for the meeting on area security last month. As soon as more officers can be hired and trained, "I think we'll have more men and women on a thin blue line ... on Tacoma Avenue South," the mayor said. That's good news to police officer Marty Price, who says more undercover officers and bicycle patrols, in particular, could sneak up on dealers and users and arrest them in the act. That combination, along with uniformed cops in marked cars, has "made well over 25 arrests of dealers and buyers since the first of the year" during special-emphasis patrols in the area, Price said. But the dealers are shrewd. Sometimes they use three people to complete a drug deal - one to hold the drugs, a second to hold the money, a third to actually make the pass from dealer to customer, Price said. Others conceal themselves with two-way radios two or three blocks away so they can alert sellers on the street to oncoming police. When marked cars come out, dealers and users melt into the woodwork, making the street at least temporarily safer, but they're never far away, Price and others say. "These guys are like cockroaches. A cop comes around, and phht, they just scatter," said Acme Tavern bartender Sandy Wilhot. Then about 4 p.m. "the cracks open up in the wooden walls" around the street "and they really start coming out again," Acme owner Hiller said. Police are asking for more community participation in the law enforcement effort, including more and frequent calls to police with details of the illegal activity and suspects. "We can't be there 24 hours a day, seven days a week. They have to be our eyes and ears," Lt. Scruggs said of business owners, customers and employees. Tacoma Avenue South workers need lessons in how to recognize and report drug deals with the level of detail police can use in making arrests, officer Price said. Staff members are planning such classes at the library. Suggestions from police include an e-mail alert system and a phone tree similar to those used by downtown merchants when they spot crime in their neighborhoods. Expanding the Business Improvement Area that provides extra police and other security downtown up the hill to Tacoma Avenue South "would make a big difference up here," officer Price observed. That pretty much squashed what had been a blossoming crime problem downtown, said Price, who normally works as a bicycle patrol officer there. But property owners pay fees for that service, and some along Tacoma Avenue South wonder whether enough would agree to the assessments. "I shouldn't have to pay for basic services," said Sherry Bockwinkel, who owns Ex-Press Printing, Inc., at 1524 Tacoma Ave. S. "As a property owner and a business owner, I'm someone who already pays a lot of taxes," she added. "I should be able to run my business without crimes going on in front of it." Myrick of the Greater Pierce County Community Network, police spokesman Mattheis and Price believe the answers aren't that simple. Just like the adage of needing a whole village to raise a child, it will take the whole community - cops, prosecutors, politicians, business owners, customers, workers, social service agencies, drug treatment centers and just plain residents - to solve the problem, Myrick thinks. That holistic approach will help cure the problem, not push it somewhere else in the city, Mattheis says. Price, a 15-year Tacoma police officer, knows that, too. "These drugs have a powerful hold on people," he said. "As long as there is money to be made, the dealers are going to be down here." Sidebar: Crime on Tacoma Avenue South Chart shows statistics on calls for police and arrests along Tacoma Avenue South from South Seventh Street to South 23rd Street during 2000 and 2002. Category 2000 2002 Percent increase/decrease Calls for service 3,559 4,328 +21.6 percent Narcotics calls for service 510 717 +40.6 percent Prostitution calls for service 235 278 +18.3 percent Incidents resulting in arrests 396 569 +43.7 percent Offenses involved in arrests 672 855 +27.2 percent Arrests for drug offenses 113 204 +80.5 percent Arrests for prostitution offenses 76 11 -85.5 percent Sources: Law Enforcement Support Agency, Tacoma Police Department Compiled by: Kris Sherman, The News Tribune * Security will be discussed during a Library Board meeting at 5 p.m. Wednesday, 1102 Tacoma Ave. S. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk