Pubdate: Thu, 11 May 2006 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2006 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Author: Jonathan D. Jones COMMUNITY DRUG INITIATIVE MOVING TO SOUTHSIDE HIGH POINT -- When Dale Newton moved his congregation to the Southside neighborhood four years ago he found something amiss. "People couldn't sit outside," said Newton, pastor of Tabernacle of Prayer, Praise and Worship, "They were afraid to come out of their homes because of the crime going on in the street." The neighborhood could soon find a solution for that problem. The High Point Police Department has targeted Southside as its next community for an initiative program designed to clean up street-level drug dealing and the violent crime accompanies it. Police spent several months "doing their homework" as Chief Jim Fealy calls it, on the neighborhood. They built cases against known drug dealers in the community through informants and the use of undercover officers buying illegal substances. The police department has made multiple purchases from about 20 drug dealers in the area, Maj. Marty Sumner told residents and community leaders during a High Point Community Against Violence meeting. Those dealers will find out about the cases against them on June 8, when police and community leaders bring them in for a frank discussion about their illegal activities in the neighborhood. Those facing more serious charges will be prosecuted. Others will be given a choice: get out of the business or go to prison. High Point police have similar programs in the West End and Daniel Brooks neighborhoods. Fealy said that in the West End community there was an average of one murder per year before the initiative. But since the initiative two years ago, there hasn't been a homicide in the neighborhood. In the first year of the program, the West End Initiative reduced violent crime by 36 percent and drug crime by 56 percent. In Daniel Brooks, 12 dealers were given the same choice last spring to cease dealing or face prosecution, and only two were caught selling drugs again. After the intervention, the dealers are given support from community groups and churches on how to build a life outside of crime. And the churches and community groups such as Tabernacle of Prayer, Praise and Worship in Southside, play a role in helping the neighbors be vigilant about drug dealing in their communities. Neighborhoods for the initiative are chosen from city crime data, Fealy said. Looking at the crime maps the city did before the West End Initiative, Fealy said he thought Southside would be second in line. But when they re-examined the crime data a year ago, Daniel Brooks had moved up in priority. "One of the things with these initiatives, it doesn't just change crime in the neighborhood," Fealy said. "It changes crime all over the city." Not only will the neighborhood benefit from the police initiative, but the city is also planning a economic revitalization for the community. Community leaders like Newton said Southside is ready for change. "We're excited and hoping that through this initiative Southside will be able to regain its neighborhood," Newton said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman