Pubdate: Tue, 20 Apr 2004 Source: Star-Banner, The (FL) Copyright: 2004 The Star-Banner Contact: http://www.starbanner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1533 OF PEOPLE POWER AND PERSISTENCE There was a time not too many years ago when venturing into the Chatmire community was unthinkable for those who didn't live there. It was simply too risky. Downright dangerous. Delivery people refused to deliver. Ambulances would only answer calls with a police escort. Even the police feared going into this community, especially after dark when their cars routinely were pelted and their windows smashed. Chatmire in the late 1990s was nothing less than a community under siege, overrun with outsiders who brought drugs and accompanying violence to this hamlet north of Dunnellon and enveloped in a sense of hopelessness. It's reputation as a neighborhood, sadly, was simply the worst of worst in Marion County. Then a handful of residents decided they had had enough. It took a better part of a decade, but the people of Chatmire can proudly say they have reclaimed their community and, with it, a clear sense of neighborhood pride. They put the exclamation point on that uplifting reality Saturday with the dedication of the new Concerned Citizens for Chatmire community center, an 800-square-foot facility that will provide a meeting and gathering place, as well as after- school tutoring and recreation for neighborhood youngsters. The road traveled to this point, though, has been pocked with frustration and rejection for the couple of dozen diehards who make up the core of the Concerned Citizens. But through unwavering persistence and, ultimately, a lock-arm partnership with the Marion County Sheriff's Office, Chatmire and its residents have succeeded against long odds. Led by Cathy Redd, Concerned Citizens began asking in 1997 for help in ridding the neighborhood of outsiders who had turned a portion of it into a virtual open-air drug supermarket. They knocked on every governmental door they could find, only to be stonewalled or flatly turned away. Then Sheriff Ed Dean stepped in. Dean and former sheriff's Capt. Otto Wettstein recognized the periodic drug sweeps and crime crackdowns were doing nothing to improve the neighborhood's crime problem or, by extension, the neighborhood itself. "Just putting people in jail wasn't solving the problem," Wettstein, now retired, told us. "New people just took over." So Wettstein, with a mandate from Dean, set about making a "change in the environment" of Chatmire. The Concerned Citizens and other residents rallied behind him and the Sheriff's Office. "They were a small group of people that wanted to make a change, but they didn't have the power to do it," Wettstein said. "When the sheriff's department got involved, it had the power and the political clout to get things going." And get going they did. The combination of people power, police power and persistence was a winning one. Wettstein brought in county Code Enforcement, which had refused for years to regulate the neighborhood, and spearheaded a neighborhood cleanup that generated 209 tons of junk and garbage in one week. Next, he got authority to demolish a number of derelict houses that were eyesores, health hazards and hiding places for drug users and criminals. Finally, the coalition acquired a $25,000 grant to build the community center out of the shell of a dilapidated house. The project and this vision were further helped by John Curtis and his Tri-County Builders, which generously put far more than $25,000 into the project, Redd said. The opening of the community center is a milestone for the Concerned Citizens for Chatmire and, more importantly, the people of the neighborhood, individually and collectively. We proudly cheer the efforts and successes of Cathy Redd and her fellow Concerned Citizens of Chatmire for, as Redd put it as Saturday's ceremony, the "blood, sweat and tears behind it." And we salute Dean, Wettstein and the other governmental officials who in the end answered Chatmire's pleas for help. Like Wettstein told us, cleaning up a community takes more than arrests and police patrols. It takes changing the environment, physically and otherwise. That's the blessing that has happened and is happening in Chatmire. It is a truly feel-good story about people and the people's government embracing a vision and uniting for the good of a neighborhood, and it's a success story that should give other neighborhoods fighting against bad elements real hope. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager