Pubdate: Sun, 22 Jun 2003 Source: Tennessean, The (TN) Copyright: 2003 The Tennessean Contact: http://www.tennessean.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/447 Author: Christian Bottorff, Sheila Burke Note: Staff Writer Alison Miller contributed to this report. CRIME HARD TO UPROOT IN PUBLIC HOUSING Millions in federal spending and a concerted police presence did not dent serious crime in Nashville's public housing during a recent two-year period in which the city's overall crime rate sank. A Metro police analysis conducted for The Tennessean shows that even as major offenses in Nashville dropped 9% from 2001 to 2002, crimes including homicide, rape, robbery and assault barely budged in public housing, dropping less than 0.8%. The analysis tallied crime at 18 of the city's largest complexes. Almost 12,000 people live in these complexes. The seeming ineffectiveness of efforts against crime in public housing is one gauge of just how intractable this problem is. Consider: * As part of drug-elimination programs, local housing officials disbursed federal grants of $1.6 million in 2001 and $1.4 million in 2002 - $12 million over the past 11 years. Federal officials acknowledge, however, that they don't check whether the money leads to actual crime and drug reduction as long as the local public housing authority spends the funds as promised. * The housing authority added security upgrades of at least $8.9 million since 1999. This included private security officers and improved locks, windows and lighting. * One special Metro police team of five officers and a sergeant was assigned to the complexes and other crime hot spots. Annual task force costs are between $450,000 and $500,000 and are paid for by the Metro Development and Housing Agency's budget. * Two decrepit complexes, Preston Taylor Homes and Vine Hill, were razed in 2001 and 1998, respectively, at a cost of $48.5 million. Housing officials said the demolition and rebuilding were completed in part to combat crime. * Applicants are barred from obtaining public housing if they have a history of violent or drug-related offenses. Last year, 153 applicants were denied admission to public and Section 8 housing as a result. * A ''one strike'' rule means residents can be evicted when guests and household members are involved in criminal activity or if their abuse of drugs or alcohol is a threat to neighbors. There were 64 evictions under this rule last year and 46 this year. Police figures for all of Nashville show that serious crime (homicide, rape, robbery, assault, burglary, theft and auto theft) dropped from 50,915 in 2001 to 46,473 in 2002. The same offenses dropped only slightly, from 2,391 to 2,372, in public housing over the same period. Fighting Crime, Drugs Housing officials say they are doing all they can. ''We're like anywhere else in the city,'' said Phil Ryan, executive director of the Metro Development and Housing Agency, which oversees the administration of Nashville's public housing. ''We ultimately rely on the Metro Police Department for security. That's the base. And we try to do all these things to enhance them.'' Crime has ''been on the decrease where we've had the resources ... to do something extra, something special,'' said Ryan, referring to the drug-elimination grants his agency has received. In fact, MDHA says, crime decreased in several complexes. Asked whether MDHA's ability to reduce crime is tied to federal grant money, Ryan said, ''Resources are definitely an issue.'' MDHA officials say the focus of their efforts to combat drugs - a significant factor in violent and other crimes - is primarily on prevention and intervention programs that aim to give children opportunities to stay out of trouble. Thus, the drug-elimination grants primarily go to local programs such as the Salvation Army, the Boy Scouts of America and the YMCA. Ryan and other Nashville housing officials said it was ''easier'' for them to focus on programs aimed at reaching younger children before they get hooked on drugs than to try to rehabilitate drug-using adults, whose addictions and habits are more likely to have deeper roots. Michael Farley, public housing coordinator for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in Middle and West Tennessee, said it was not HUD's responsibility to monitor whether the federal drug-elimination grants were taking drugs and crime out of a city's public housing landscape. ''Whether or not the efficacy of the program is successful can sometimes be an enigma,'' Farley said. ''But if we find out it has not been successful, we would take those funds back.'' He said there were no indications that grant money was not being used effectively in Nashville. But the drug-elimination grants, which made up a significant part of crime-fighting efforts in public housing, have been terminated. HUD secretary Mel Martinez worked with Congress to terminate the program, saying it was well-intentioned but suffered from many abuses and duplicated the work of other Cabinet departments. Never A Program For Parents One longtime public housing resident said Nashville's policy for fighting drug crime in public housing had focused almost exclusively on juveniles at the expense of adults who desperately need help. ''Every corner has a program for the children,'' said Gayle Fleming, whose daily work at the John Henry Hale Homes brings her face-to-face with residents desperate to learn the basics about parenting, managing a household and keeping their families safe. Her program to teach parenting and other skills to complex residents has been funded since 1992 by the federal drug-elimination grant program. ''But a program for the parents - you never see a program for the parents. It's always for the children. I know the children are supposed to be the future. But what kind of future? There is nothing for the leaders of those kids.'' Fleming, a 32-year resident at the north Nashville public housing complex, said police were doing their jobs, riding through frequently and making arrests when necessary. But as she works each day, she said, she stares into the faces of distraught neighbors and residents who are frustrated at seeing trespassers arrested but back on the streets within hours without any apparent repercussions. Police Say They Are Aggressive For their part, Metro police officers say they're aggressively targeting criminals and monitoring trouble spots. Officer Randall Moore, during a Friday night patrol through several housing complexes including Sam Levy Homes and James A. Cayce Homes, said the continuing crime was frustrating. It's outsiders, he said, who come to the complexes from other areas of town and even out of the county to buy drugs. Drugs, he said, are the major cause of crime at the developments. Moore is a Metro police officer paid by MDHA to patrol the city's housing complexes. Other problems come, he said, when families take in friends and relatives who aren't supposed to be there because of public-housing restrictions against residents with a history of violence. Many are boyfriends, Moore said, and some are former inmates just released from prison, most of whom have no job and no other place to go. ''They've told me up front, 'Who's going to hire me with my record?' '' Moore said. ''Me being a police officer, I'm all for people going to jail when they commit crimes, but what's going to happen to them when they get out?'' Crime in the developments was one of the most frustrating problems during Gerald Nicely's 22-year tenure as the executive director of the Metro Development and Housing Agency, he said last week in an interview. Sometimes police and housing officials would get crime down at one development, only to see it move somewhere else, he said. ''We spent a lot of money during my time there, and I know they're doing it now,'' Nicely said. Much of that was for tearing down and rebuilding Vine Hill and Preston Taylor Homes, at a cost of $13.5 million and $35 million, respectively. Sam Levy Homes is the next complex scheduled for reconstruction, in late 2004. It will cost an estimated $32 million in grant money, MDHA funds and Metro funds to tear down 480 units and rebuild 226 homes. One resident said the tear-down at Preston Taylor had been a success. Fallon Carter, 19, and her 15-month-old daughter moved there six months ago after a year at the James A. Cayce Homes. The move from a 1,853-resident complex to the rebuilt Preston Taylor, which houses slightly more than 500 people, is a new beginning, Carter said. ''Now my daughter and I can sit outside and enjoy the fresh air without being caught in the crossfire,'' Carter said. ''No one in their right mind wants to live under government housing for the rest of their life. Preston Taylor is a steppingstone for me because I hope to own my own home in two years.'' But the federal grants that made the demolition and rebuilding possible are going away. The $20 million revitalization grant that will be used to replace Sam Levy Homes could be the last, federal housing officials have said. Fleming, a resident of public housing, knows there are no easy answers. ''This didn't start overnight, and it's not going to get cleaned up overnight,'' Fleming said. ''I really don't know - I guess for God to come down or something. We're going to need more than - I don't know - it's going to take a lot of something.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk