Pubdate: Mon, 13 Jul 2015 Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) Copyright: 2015 PG Publishing Co., Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/pm4R4dI4 Website: http://www.post-gazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/341 Author: Julian Routh APOLLO GROUP TRIES TO RID ITS STREETS OF DRUG DEALERS The small community of Apollo - with a population of just over 1,600 - has a big drug problem that it's trying to shake. Local officials say the Armstrong County borough in the Kiskiminetas River valley has been plagued by a culture of drug use in recent years. As a result, it has seen an increase in drug-overdose deaths, a pair of drive-by shootings, an increase in robberies and a state police raid in February that uncovered a large-scale heroin ring. But Apollo residents and local officials have started a "raid" of their own: Residents Against Illicit Drugs, an organization that aims to rid the community of drugs. The group was assembled this year by Apollo Mayor Jeff Held, who said he noticed what he believed to be increased amounts of drug activity on the streets before he took office in January 2014. Near his home, Mr. Held said, he would often see people visiting known drug houses at all hours of the night. He lived one block from where authorities raided a fully functional methamphetamine lab in 2011. "A lot of people don't believe a small town like Apollo has a drug problem," he said. "When I took office, I focused on preparing ourselves to counter the tide." RAID resulted from a community meeting in February, a day before state police found more than 16,000 stamp bags of heroin, 2 kilograms of cocaine, marijuana, crack cocaine and three guns at an Apollo apartment. The anti-drug organization comprises about 50 local and county officials, community members, counselors, police officers and treatment experts who meet monthly to discuss RAID's three-pronged approach of education, awareness and support. RAID members recently began going door to door to educate the community on the dangers of drug use. "We're trying to educate, educate, educate, but we're still fighting a battle," said Armstrong County Coroner Brian Myers. "We want to win the war, but that's going to be tough to do." A former iron and steel town, Apollo is lined with streets of single-family houses - most of which were built in 1939 or earlier - that surround a central shopping plaza. About 94 percent of residents are white, with a median age of 33, according to the most recent census data. This year, 13 people in Armstrong have died of drug overdoses, with five other cases pending toxicology results. Mr. Myers said that number is on pace to surpass 30 by the end of the year, almost twice as many as in 2014. The numbers show that the drug problem is countywide, Mr. Myers said. "There's not one neighborhood or one ZIP code that's excluded from this issue," he said. Some officials in Apollo, including Mr. Held, said they believe drugs are entering from beyond the community's borders, especially from Westmoreland County to the south. Confirmed overdose deaths in Westmoreland are also expected to surpass last year's record number of 87 by the end of the year, according to its coroner's office. The county has recorded 41 confirmed overdoses this year to date, 16 of which were heroin related. There are 27 suspected overdoses, pending toxicology results. "We figure that because we're the gateway to Armstrong County [from Westmoreland] ... we're seeing lots of drugs coming through town," said Diane Bradshaw, who heads the Apollo council's public safety committee. But where the drugs come from doesn't matter much to one lifelong Apollo resident, who said he is scared for the youth in the town. "There's just such fear in the community," said the man, who asked that his name not be used because he has to live in the town. "It's just as bad as it's been for the past 10 years. It hasn't gotten any better." Mr. Held said small improvements have occurred since RAID assembled, including the fact that some smaller marijuana and heroin dealers have "folded up and left town." The Apollo police department plans to install security cameras throughout North Plaza - the main shopping center - to prevent robberies, said Mr. Held, who oversees the department of one full-time officer and five part-time officers. RAID is another step toward a drug-free Apollo in an effort by those who believe it can be a quaint, close-knit neighborhood. "The drug problem doesn't show that we're a bad town," the mayor said. "But we need to be vigilant and clean it up." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt