Pubdate: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 Source: Martinsville Bulletin (VA) Copyright: 2005 Martinsville Bulletin Contact: http://www.martinsvillebulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2003 Author: Debbie Hall, Bulletin Staff Writer MESSAGE TO LANDLORDS: TAKE ON DRUG DEALERS Donny Gusler wants landlords to take on drug dealers to make rental property safer for tenants. "I challenge them to get involved," Gusler said. "It's up to landlords to make their property safe for their tenants. Decent people want a safe place for their kids to play." Gusler, assistant manager of the Richwood and Glen Ridge apartment complex south of Martinsville, said there was a drug problem at Richwood when he started working in the maintenance department nearly three years ago. "It was like Dodge City when I first came there," he said, with gun fights and rowdy behavior commonplace. At the time, Gusler was just looking for a job. He had worked at Fieldcrest for 18 years when the company closed. "When the lady interviewing me found out I had a black belt in karate, I wondered why that was such a big issue," Gusler said. He soon found out, and realized he was destined for a different sort of maintenance work. "I don't mind getting up in a drug dealer's face and I'm not one to buckle down to people getting up in my face," Gusler said, and he decided to turn the tables. "My goal was to do away with, not just cut down, the drug activity" at the apartment complex, he said. To do that, Gusler enlisted the help of some old friends at the Henry County Sheriff's Office. "Richwood, like some other apartment complexes, ended up having problems (with people) hanging around there .... congregating or associating in the parking lot" and other areas, said sheriff's Major Kimmy Nester. "We answered quite a few calls there." But unlike many other apartment managers, Gusler wanted to do something about his problem, said Sheriff Frank Cassell. "He realizes that there's a problem and he cooperates," said Cassell. "He calls us and gives us information. A lot of managers don't want to admit they have a problem and don't want to get involved and he wants very much to get involved." That helps police do their job, he said. "It works a lot better when you've got a manager who is working to keep a complex cleaned up," Cassell said. However, "it's not something you change overnight," Nester said. Working with vice officers and other investigators, Gusler came up with a plan to put extra patrols in the area. Vice officers also offered other tips on tools to help combat the problem. For instance, surveillance cameras were a boon to the effort, Gusler said. "Some of the cameras are visible, some are not," he said, recalling that installing the cameras meant first convincing the property's owners in Winston-Salem, N.C., Landura Investment, that it was a good idea. Shirley Hunt, head property manager at the complex, oversaw the camera installation, Gusler said. The results were positive. "The cameras helped tremendously. Nobody wants to be on camera," Gusler said. Since the parking lot and nearby areas were visible from the road in either direction, officers occasionally would stake out the area on foot. Undesirables in the area wouldn't see the patrol cars or have an opportunity to disperse before officers could make an arrest, Gusler said. Such efforts are ongoing. The reason for them, to Gusler, is summed up in a new sign recently erected at the entrance of the apartment complex. The sign reads: "Give Our Kids A Chance," he said. Gusler paid for the sign out of his own pocket. "It's like in the military when you raise the American flag for an area after you take it," he said of the sign's significance. Now, Gusler would like other property owners with similar problems to join the fight. Giving residents a safe place to live and children a safe place to play while taking a bite out of drugs is challenging but also rewarding, Gusler said. And the more involvement, the better, both Gusler and Nester said. "It's really a form of community policing. We all live within society," Nester said. Combining efforts towards a common goal results in "the most positive response" and the most positive outcome. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom