Pubdate: Wed, 03 Sep 2008
Source: Guardian, The (UK)
Copyright: 2008 Guardian Newspapers Limited
Contact:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175
Author: Steven Morris

NO QUICK FIX

They bring grief, violence and addiction to their communities - so 
why should we help them? Because many of them want out. Steven Morris 
on a new deal for drug dealers

He has lots of cash, the lifestyle that goes with it and a sense of 
power. But Jeff, a drug dealer from Bristol, does not have what he 
craves: security, happiness and the option of just going to the pub 
without worrying about getting waylaid by the police, or an armed rival.

"I've got a great car, I've got all the girls I want but is it 
enough?" he says. "Not really. I'm always looking over my shoulder, 
wondering when my number may be up."

And he feels guilt, not an emotion always associated with his 
profession. "I see the looks I get from people in the area. Most of 
them hate me and hate what dealers do to their neighbourhood. I'm in 
my 30s and this is a young man's game. If there was a way out, I'd take it."

A pioneering, government-funded project, called Switch, has just been 
launched in inner-city Bristol and aims to give people like Jeff that way out.

Most drugs projects target users, but Switch works with dealers, to 
help them move towards education, counselling, rehabilitation, 
housing and financial advice. It has nothing to do with the police 
but is the brainchild of three local drugs and alcohol agencies: 
Community Action Around Alcohol and Drugs, IDEAL, and Nilaari.

Lee Vaughan, one of Switch's two outreach workers, says: "Many of the 
dealers we speak to are desperate to get out. We want to help them do that."

The concept of the project, the first of its kind in the UK, is 
straightforward. Vaughan and his colleague, Vernon Blanc, spend their 
evenings walking around Barton Hill, a deprived area a couple of 
miles to the east of Bristol city centre, and nearby neighbourhoods. 
They talk to dealers, they drop off calling cards in pubs and pin 
their flyers up in cafes. If a dealer shows interest, they arrange 
follow-up meetings and suggest ways of giving him or her the support 
and skills they need to break away from the streets.

It is hard and dangerous work. The pair are trying to win over people 
who have a well-founded mistrust of strangers. "If it's perceived as 
being anything to do with the police, it won't work. They've got to 
believe that what they say to us will be confidential, which it is," 
says Vaughan.

The police know about the project and there are mugshots of Vaughan 
and Blanc at the local station so officers can give the outreach 
workers a bit of space if they run into them on the streets.

But that also means Vaughan and Blanc are pretty much on their own if 
they find they have run into trouble, though the pair say they feel safe.

"We have lots of contacts and I think we have a feel for when a 
situation could be too dangerous," says Vaughan. "Many in the 
community know what we're doing and are behind us."

Vaughan accepts that the major dealers at the top of the supply chain 
are beyond their reach, but adds that Switch targets a wide range of 
dealers. It focuses on user-dealers - those who dabble in dealing to 
fund their own drug habits, and Vaughan and Blanc try to persuade 
street dealers who may have two or three runners working for them to 
stop selling drugs, as well as those at the next level, such as Jeff, 
who make decent money.

Switch was partly inspired by a project in Baltimore, Maryland, a 
city with an estimated 40,000 addicts. In 2005, the then police 
commissioner, Leonard Hamm, noticed how many dealers, especially more 
mature ones, were telling him and his officers that they were tired 
of their dangerous trade and wanted a way out. Groups of officers 
began patrolling the streets in T-shirts emblazoned with "Get out of 
the game. Stop killing people" and handing out leaflets that posed 
questions such as: "Are you afraid to leave home without your 
weapon?" and "Does your family ask you to stay away from them?" If 
the answers are yes, the leaflet suggests they look for a new career.

The Baltimore project is still going strong: officer Keith Harrison 
says that between 200 and 250 people - drug dealers, gang members and 
addicts - join every year. "We are still finding that a lot of people 
want to be helped out of a life of crime. The biggest problem we have 
is finding employers willing to take them on."

Vaughan and Blanc are under no illusions about the difficulty of 
their work. In the short term their objective is to build up trust 
with dealers; by the end of 18 months they aim to have referred at 
least 20 dealers to a programme providing the support and advice that 
will help them quit - a tiny percentage of Bristol's street dealers. 
Vaughan suspects not all local people will be easily convinced of the 
need to spend public money rescuing dealers. But the alternative, he 
points out, is simply waiting for dealers to be convicted and 
imprisoned - a potentially much more costly use of public money.

But what do the dealers make of the project? Guy (not his real name), 
who used to be a dealer before deciding to mend his ways while in 
jail and is now a drugs project mentor, says he believes there are 
many dealers who want out and would be interested. "It's not a good 
life," he says. "When I was dealing, I constantly had people after 
me. You didn't have a quiet life, ever. You couldn't just go to the 
movies - you were always on your guard. Many do want something different."

Guy, who came to the UK from Jamaica and says he fell into dealing 
because he struggled to get legitimate work, said the driving force 
behind his reform was the shame he felt at destroying the lives of 
other people and his community. "The community is important in our 
culture," he says. "I could see the harm I was doing."

Sense of guilt

Switch is hoping to tap into this sense of community - and the 
perhaps surprising sense of guilt that dealers can feel.

Nick Bentley, director of Ideal, says he hopes that Switch can come 
to be seen as a group that residents can call on to help with 
problems caused by drug-users. "If there's antisocial behaviour and 
they don't want to call the police, then Switch [might be able] to help."

But the drugs scene in Bristol is becoming ever more complex. The 
Switch team says Somalian gangs are becoming stronger and the more 
established West Indian gangs are fighting for ever smaller and more 
fractured turfs.

Bentley accepts Switch faces an "uphill struggle" and while the 
police have been encouraging in their support of the project, 
privately police officers are sceptical that the outreach workers can 
make a difference. One Avon and Somerset officer says: "It's worth a 
go and I wish them well. But will they really be able to convince a 
drug dealer making a lot of money to give it all up and get a proper 
job? I'm not convinced. I know a lot of dealers who'd just laugh in 
their faces - but good luck to them. Anything that takes a dealer off 
the street is good as far as we're concerned."

The scheme is certainly tiny compared with its Baltimore big brother. 
It receives a grant of only UKP 100,000 - enough for just 18 months - 
from the New Deal for Communities fund, which goes to the most 
deprived neighbourhoods in England.

Still, agencies from around the country are watching Switch with 
interest. Gary Wallace, the chief executive of Broadreach House, a 
treatment and support centre in Plymouth, says outreach workers have 
long worked with dealers, but not in Switch's formal or high-profile way.

Wallace believes more radical projects like Switch may become more 
important because of the increase in drug users in treatment 
programmes. It may now take different, more original approaches to 
keep the numbers of users outside the system falling. "As we reach 
the point where the 'easier' people are in treatment, we're going to 
have to find more radical ways of helping the others," he says. 
"Schemes like this could be one way."

Switch only launched in the spring so it is still early days, but 
there are encouraging signs that the community is behind the project, 
despite public money being used to help some of the most feared and 
despised members of society, and there has not yet been the backlash 
that some feared. Only time will tell if it will take dealers like 
Jeff off the street.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart