Pubdate: Mon, 25 Jul 2005 Source: St. Augustine Record (FL) Copyright: 2005 The St. Augustine Record Contact: http://www.staugustine.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/771 WEED AND SEED WILL BE A TOUGH ROW TO HOW West Augustine is at a crossroads. There are indicators that the road being taken will lead to better lives for the residents there. The main drag is sprucing up. Entrepreneurs are taking chances with new, innovative businesses along West King Street. It is, apparently, paying off for both the owners and the infrastructure along that road. The county has implemented a forward-thinking housing project which initially gave incentives for small developers to take chances on providing affordable homes in the area. It's working. New homes are going up weekly. As a bonus, old, dilapidated buildings are being razed to make room for the new. There's a West King Street master plan laid out. Weire looking at expanding recreational services there as well. And now West Augustine has been designated a federal Weed and Seed area - one of only 22 in the country and the only effort in Florida this year. The good news is that up to $250,000 in federal funds could be provided annually for West Augustine efforts. The maybe-not-so-good-news is that the money isn't a gift or grant. It is, from where we sit, more of a carrot dangling in front of the nose of opportunity -- meant to lead it grudgingly down C.R. 214 and through its neighborhoods. To begin with there's much work to be done in anticipation of the project. The designation means nothing on its own, in terms of funding. This is a community-oriented effort from beginning to end. The steps that precede official recognition include seating a steering committee and convening meetings, poring over implementation manuals, setting guidelines, drafting a letter of intent and finally submitting an application. If the process passes government muster and money is forthcoming, itis not meant to 'pay' for anything in terms of brick and sticks. The success or failure of the program will reside solely on the stakeholders in the process -- spell that RESIDENTS. And the historic truth is that West Augustine has been a very tough place to implement anything but fleeting and sporadic efforts at self- advancement - with the bright exception of the West Augustine Community Redevelopment Association. The long-term success of the Weed and Seed program will depend on years of hard work, chipping away slowly at the causes of neighborhood degradation; including crime, economic under-development, poor housing and inadequate utilities. There must be cooperation between law enforcement and human service agencies, that's true. But the Weed and Seed program won't fund these efforts to any meaningful extent. There will be no flood of money into West Augustine in terms of crime prevention and social services. The way we see it, Weed and Seed bankrolls involvement by the community. It brings the elements together. The enhancements happen as a result of that cooperation. This may be a project in which St. Johns Vision could take a leading role. A good first step for us here would be to send organizers to Palatka next month. Our neighbor to the southwest is a year or so ahead of us and is hosting a community meeting in August to discuss dispersal of its first $175,000 installment for 2006. That city is also in the process of hiring a full-time Weed and Seed coordinator. The Palatka Daily News reported last week that the city lost $175,000 this year because it did not have a coordinator in place in 2005. The city was to have received five yearly payments of $175,000. Now it will receive four. If anyone thinks this is a federal program that will throw a quarter of a million dollars a year willy-nilly at community ills, they'd better think again. Rep. John Mica has helped by posturing West Augustine for a hand-up -- not a hand-out. We'll have to plan the work; then work the plan. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth