Pubdate: Tue, 04 May 2004 Source: Asheville Citizen-Times (NC) Copyright: 2004 Asheville Citizen-Times Contact: http://www.citizen-times.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/863 Author: John Boyle COUNCIL VOTES DOWN DRUG INTERDICTION PROPOSAL ASHEVILLE - After an impassioned discussion, Asheville City Council on Monday decided against allocating up to $1 million for a drug interdiction program focused on the city's public housing. "I think the council just turned its back on a street-level drug interdiction program," said Vice Mayor Carl Mumpower, who made the proposal to allocate between $750,000 and $1 million toward interdiction. Mumpower maintains that the city's housing projects are overrun with drug dealers who cause other residents to live in fear and negatively influence children's lives. His motion was voted down 4-3. Mayor Charles Worley, Councilman Brownie Newman and Councilwomen Holly Jones and Terry Bellamy voted against it, while Councilmen Jan Davis and Joe Dunn supported Mumpower's motion. Those opposed agreed that drugs are a problem requiring the city's attention. But they advocated a slower, more methodical approach that would attack the problem "holistically" by also addressing societal issues such as jobs, underfunded education and after-school programs and inadequate drug counseling. "If we're going to do it, let's do it right, dollar-for-dollar," Bellamy said during an impassioned soliloquy before the vote. "If we're going to do a war on drugs, police are not the answer; dollar-for-dollar." Bellamy, who is African American, also suggested that most of those arrested would also be black. The discussion Monday came during a budget workshop as council members hammer out the city's spending plan for next year. The city manager's proposed budget calls for $27.4 million to go toward public safety, out of a total budget of $103.3 million. At the Hillcrest public housing development near downtown, longtime resident Kimberly Johnson said Monday that more enforcement is needed, but interdiction alone won't keep children from choosing a life of drug use or dealing. "If they don't have nothing to do, eventually that's what they're going to end up doing - selling drugs," said Johnson, a 26-year-old mother of two and lifelong Hillcrest resident. "But first they've got to clean up the streets." Mumpower offered a second motion to have the Police Department design a comprehensive drug interdiction program and bring it back to council within two weeks, but that motion also failed. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom