Pubdate: Tue, 22 Jun 2004 Source: Hampton Union, The (NH) Copyright: 2004 Seacoast Online. Contact: http://www.seacoastonline.com/news/hampton/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3146 Author: Susan Morse NEW SUPPORT GROUP TACKLES WAR ON DRUGS SEABROOK - From an initiative started by former police chief William Baker, the Seabrook Police Department is starting a "Seabrook Drug Coalition of the Willing" to help drug- and alcohol-addicted residents. Sgt. Michael Frost is coordinating the program under the direction of acting Chief David Currier and acting Deputy Chief Patrick Manthorn. Frost is looking for residents willing to sign on as volunteers to help their neighbors and strangers overcome drug and alcohol addiction. Those willing are asked to call the police department at 474-5200. "How I envision it," said Frost, "we're looking for resources, those who have been through NA (Narcotics Anonymous), AA (Alcoholics Anonymous), the people who've lived in Seabrook and dealt with addiction. I'm not looking for experts. I'm looking for people who have compassion, looking to create a safety net." The specifics of the program and how the volunteers will be employed have yet to be worked out. It depends on what residents are willing to take on, said Frost. The coalition's aim is support rather than enforcement, said Frost. The drug war will continue in the department, but the focus of the coalition is on getting help to those who need it. "This is not just kicking down doors and making arrests," Frost said. "It's about developing a support network." Currier said the department, meanwhile, is targeting drug dealers. In most cases, dealers are users who sell drugs to support their habit, said Currier. "There are a lot of different tactics to take," Currier said. "We really have to attack it at the roots where the dealers are. We know who some of the people are." Investigations are lengthy, and it takes time to get enough on a suspect to get probable cause in court, he said. Use of heroin in Seabrook has been called epidemic by Sgt. Ellen Arcieri of the state Narcotic Investigations Unit. Frost, who served for eight years as a consultant for the federally initiated Northeast Regional Training for Drug Free Schools and Communities, said Seabrook's problem, while bad, is no different than in cities and towns throughout New England. "I see the problem as epidemic, not just epidemic in Seabrook," Frost said. "We have more opportunities than threats. Those opportunities are every citizen who is willing to stand up and say, 'I'm willing to help someone, I'm willing to help a neighbor, an addict, an alcoholic.'" Frost had no figures on the number of families in town affected by drugs. Twenty-five percent of all families nationwide are touched in some way by alcohol or drug abuse, he said. Seabrook's close-knit community has been the subject of ridicule from outsiders in the past. This closeness is a plus for the coalition, said Frost. People know their neighbors. "What's publicized as a negative is a positive in an informal network," Frost said. Last November, Currier went public on the heroin problem, when he told the Board of Selectmen heroin was cheap, potent and flowing into town. Three months after becoming chief in December, Baker held a well-attended heroin forum and announced his intention to coordinate a drug coalition. Baker resigned last month, citing lack of support by the majority of selectmen for his initiatives for the department, including his proposal to send a Seabrook officer to the Seacoast Drug Task Force. The town has since applied to the state for the grant money to send an officer to the task force. The Seabrook Police Department has yet to hear whether the grant has been approved, said Currier. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin