Pubdate: Fri, 03 Mar 2006 Source: Bangor Daily News (ME) Copyright: 2006 Bangor Daily News Inc. Contact: http://www.bangornews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/40 Author: Sharon Kiley Mack NEWPORT EXPANDS DRUG-FREE SAFE ZONES Penalties Higher For Possessing, Selling Illegal Paraphernalia In Certain Sections NEWPORT - A decade ago, Maine's schools and grounds were designated drug-free zones, areas where drug dealers would face significantly higher punishments if caught and convicted. The idea has been so successful, said police Chief Leonard Macdaid, that Newport is expanding those safe zones to include town parks, athletic fields, and other areas where children gather. "The idea is to make the punishment more severe and deter this type of drug activity from these areas," Macdaid told selectmen on Wednesday night. Town Manager James Ricker explained that if a person is caught outside a safe zone with illegal pills, for example, the charge may be a Class D misdemeanor. But caught in a school zone or safety zone, the charge is elevated to a Class C felony. The board wholeheartedly agreed and set five safe zones. They include the Grove Street playground and ball field, the Sebasticook Valley Community Center, the Sebasticook Lake public beachfront, the public boat launch and the gazebo in the Main Street Park. Entrepreneur Greg Lovley also has requested that his Newport Entertainment Center and encompassing parking area be included, and Ricker said he is checking into the legality of adding private property to the safe zone list. In other business, the board approved a new lease agreement for $1 a year to provide public parking on Main Street at the former Key Bank block. The new agreement was necessary because the block has been sold by Goodwin Gilman to Joshua Tardy. Ricker also notified the selectmen that Code Enforcement Officer Fred Hickey has served notice to 15 property owners for land use violations. Ricker said these notices involve unsafe and unsightly properties. "He is working with five of the owners and two have already started cleanup," Ricker said. The board also was informed that Penquis CAP, which has been leasing the town's former recreation center building on West Street, has relocated its Head Start program to Newport Elementary School. "After June, the fate of that property will be up to you," Ricker said. Ricker is currently researching conditions of the property's donation, which he believes specify that its use must benefit children, and said if the land and building is sold, the profit could be used to fund playground equipment or benefit the Newport Cultural Center. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman