Pubdate: Sun, 09 Sep 2007 Source: Concord Monitor (NH) Copyright: 2007 Monitor Publishing Company Contact: http://www.concordmonitor.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/767 Author: Ray Duckler THE PROBLEM WITH PITTSFIELD Residents Raise Alarm About Drug Dealers; Town Works To Respond Priscilla Lemieux enjoys a smoke before bed, usually around 11 p.m. But she doesn't enjoy the activity she sometimes sees at that time, across the alley from her apartment. She sees cars coming and going, never staying long enough for a cup of coffee, and she says she knows what's happening. She's seen drugs and money exchange hands. "Right over there," Lemieux said recently, pointing out her living room window. "There are cars going in and out of there all the time, and they're only stopping by for a minute or two," she said. "You're not stupid. I'm a recovering drug addict. I know what to look for, and I know what I see." Lemieux, 28, and others in the area say they've witnessed young people, perhaps in their late teens, maybe their early 20s, conducting drug transactions on downtown streets. They occur near businesses and apartment buildings, a few hundred yards from the police station. "I know this is happening," Lemieux said. "I keep close to the streets in this town. I live right downtown, and I have acquaintances who hear stuff and see stuff, and I see stuff personally. It's pretty much common knowledge in this town." Residents say the problem is not as blatant as it once was. Not since the town held a meeting last month to discuss how to combat the problem. And not since a petition was circulated by Larry Berube, who's owned Zoya's restaurant, in the town's center, the past 4 years. "It was out in the open, but now that I've started this, It's gone back under," Berube said. "You know it's out there, though." Berube is in the center of the storm. Just hours after he submitted his petition to the town administrator last month, his 11-year-old son's bedroom window was smashed sometime after 1 a.m. "My wife thought she heard something," Berube said, seated in his empty restaurant last week, shortly after closing. "We looked outside and didn't see anything. The next morning we got up and the window was broke." Berube, 48, looked defeated. He said his restaurant and home, a half-mile away, have been vandalized 13 times since he began his crusade to clean up the town. There have been no arrests. He walked past empty booths in his restaurant and past the kitchen grill that hadn't been cleaned yet from a day's worth of cooking. He pointed to the back door that had a black swastika drawn on it. He said his front window had one also, but it came off with window cleaner. He said a screen at his house had been slashed. "Pittsfield's a good town," Berube said. "I like living in Pittsfield. There's good and bad points. It's a beautiful town. But the last year-and-a-half, it's gotten out of control." Paul Rogers, 39, is a lifelong resident. He owns the video store and hair salon, housed in the same building, on Main Street. There are apartments upstairs. "I would see people coming and going, coming and going, coming and going," Rogers said. "I said to the (police) chief, 'On many occasions I see this going on, why can't we put a surveillance camera there? Why can't we do something?' To appease me from time to time he would just say, 'Oh yeah, yeah, we'll do something.' Well, nothing ever came about from it." Just up Main Street, near the green banners on light posts that read, "Welcome to historic Pittsfield," is the police department, where Chief Robert Wharem has been forced to defend himself and his department recently. Rogers and Berube claim the police haven't been aggressive enough against the dealers they say are taking over the town. Wharem said the town's drug problem is no different than other areas. He said Pittsfield's congested nature - 600 apartments in a small area - make it easy for merchants and neighbors to detect buying and selling. "That in and of itself draws inner-city problems," Wharem said. "What happens is these individuals see stuff that makes them believe that it's more rampant than it was before, which is not the case. . . . I believe what they're seeing is it's more visible than it was two years ago." Wharem also said that with just a full-time chief and one full-time detective, coupled with limited financial resources, the police can't be everywhere all the time and can't purchase the necessary equipment. Dealers see a cruiser and quickly cover their tracks. To prove his point, he drove his cruiser through town. "This lady, what is she doing?" he said. "How do we know? We can't be judgmental without a reason. We have to see in three minutes what (residents) have all day to see." Meanwhile, Pittsfield continues to battle drugs and blows to its reputation. Past events, like vandalism in the town cemetery and a violent act in which a Pittsfield Middle-High boys' soccer player broke an opponent's leg, have added to its black eye. Lemieux, who cleans houses for a living, has three children, ages 3 to 9. Despite her complaints about drug activity, she defends Pittsfield. "When you see it in the newspaper, it's mostly bad stuff, but there's a lot of good stuff. They have the Balloon Rally, they have Old Home Day, they have an amazing Pittsfield Youth Baseball Association. . . . And the elementary school is top notch." Soon Lemieux's 9-year-old son, Jacen, returned from school. He walked to the far corner of the living room, across from the fish tank, to begin his homework. "Guess what, mama?" Jacen said. "The teacher said I'm getting better in everything." "That's wonderful," Lemieux answered. "That's really great." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek