Pubdate: Fri, 27 Jun 2003 Source: Hartford Courant (CT) Copyright: 2003 The Hartford Courant Contact: http://www.ctnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/183 Author: Matt Burgard A COMMUNITY SOUNDS OFF Activists -- Drugs Not Confined To City For months, residents in Hartford's neighborhoods have been admonished by state and city leaders to stand up to the drug dealers and other criminals roaming their streets. But at a meeting of community activists and other local officials Thursday, residents pointed out that the horrors of the drug trade aren't confined to Hartford alone. "We may have parents whose children are out on the streets selling the drugs, but who do you think they're selling them to?" said activist Larry Charles Sr. "Parents in the suburbs may watch the problem on TV and say, 'My God, look what's happening in the city,' but it's their kids who are coming in to buy this stuff." Striking a similar chord, city social services worker Andrea Comer said she is often discouraged by the unwillingness on the part of the city's corporations to acknowledge the problems in the neighborhoods. Comer said the city received several calls from local corporations last week after a shrine was set up on Farmington Avenue to mark the recent death of a man in a car crash. "They didn't want their employees to have to see the shrine, to be reminded of what's happening in our city as they came in from the suburbs to go to work," Comer said. But those same corporations are often silent, Comer said, when city agencies and other community groups approach them about job or internship opportunities for young people in Hartford. "If they really want to do something to improve public safety in Hartford, they should do more about providing jobs," she said. Thursday's meeting at the Community Renewal Team building on Windsor Street was set up as a free-wheeling exchange of ideas and opinions on the problems in the city's neighborhoods. The meeting also was scheduled to give people an opportunity to talk about a recent appearance by community activist the Rev. Cornell Lewis on a segment of the NBC show "Dateline." One theme that frequently arose was the need to overcome the fear that many residents feel in confronting drug dealers and other criminals. Teri Morrison, who is raising six children on a stretch of Garden Street known for heavy drug activity, said she and her neighbors were recently surprised to find out how easy it can be to take a stand. "We just started coming out on our porches and yelling at them to get off our property, get off our block," she said. "After a while, it became kind of embarrassing for the dealers and the buyers, so they moved on." If all of the city's neighborhoods adopted such an attitude, the dealers could be chased beyond the city limits and into the suburbs, said activist Marcia Morris. "Let the people in Avon and Simsbury deal with it," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens