Pubdate: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: JAMES PINKERTON , Houston Chronicle Rio Grande Valley Bureau VALLEY TOWN TRIES TO STEER ITS YOUTH AWAY FROM GANGS DONNA - This small Rio Grande Valley city has been in the news plenty of times, but for all the wrong reasons. Over the years, local headlines have detailed the growing influence of gangs and a rise of satanic worship, against a backdrop of crooked cops, rampant drug trafficking, chronic political in-fighting between two factions over control of City Hall and a water system that almost went dry. But it was the ghoulish murder of a 12-year-old boy last spring that caused residents of this dirt-poor town to focus on one major problem - how to keep their children from going astray. "This murder that happened in Donna was a wake-up call," insists Police Chief Miguel Carreon. "If we didn't do anything about the gang problem by paying attention to these kids, we're going to have the same thing happen." Carreon said the murder of David Cardenas last April raised questions about who is minding the children in Donna . Cardenas, a seventh-grader living with an older sister, was murdered shortly after he was dropped off by a family member near a neighborhood store on a Friday evening. Because relatives thought he was staying with members of his extended family, he was not missed until he failed to come home from school the following Monday afternoon. "We're starting to do something about it," Carreon said. "And one thing I've seen in this community - after this tragedy with the 12-year-old - we're getting more involved; citizens are getting more involved." Carreon has ample reason to worry about the town's youth. Donna is a city of 15,000 without any large industries, a town where city parks have been stripped of playground equipment by vandals and where the city swimming pool was filled in years ago because it was too expensive to repair. About 85 percent to 90 percent of the residents live at or below the poverty level. With many Donna households headed by single mothers attempting to raise large families with limited time for teens, the lure of gangs is powerful. In the past, Donna police have documented the existence of 26 gangs in the city; they say 23 are currently active. Gang-related graffiti marks walls, abandoned houses and businesses throughout the town despite a stepped-up effort by police to crack down on spray-painting "taggers" and gang activity. "What we need are jobs," asserts the police chief. At the Donna Chamber of Commerce, executive director Sylvia Escamilla tries to organize activities for youngsters. On this year's calendar are health fairs, car shows, beauty pageants, appreciation days for notable citizens and safe Halloween activities. All the details are faithfully faxed by Escamilla to local media outlets on letterheads with the chamber's hopeful slogan, "A New Beginning." "We wanted to show we were doing something. I send all my press releases to the newspaper to show Donna is back in gear, or in the right gear," Escamilla said. "And it's all about getting people involved. Stop the politics, stop the gossip and let's concentrate on Donna ." The problems Donna has with gangs are in some instances imported, since the school district draws in students from an 89-square-mile area - far beyond the town limits. Ringing the town are nearly 60 colonias, the Spanish word for unincorporated subdivisions that often lack basic services, and in many of these remote neighborhoods gangs seem to rule by default. "I would say 85 percent of the people in the Donna school district are living at or below the poverty level," said David Simmons, who is the district's tax collector and also chief of the Donna Volunteer Fire Department. "I go out and visit the colonias and I see it. We have people living in buses, and it's like Third World conditions. It's unbelievable, but we have it in the Donna city limits, too." Donna school officials are trying a number of strategies. For the last three years, they have used student mediators to counsel other students having difficulties - a project known by its acronym PALS, Peer Assistance and Leadership. The district also operates a student mentoring program, pairing troubled students with local college and high school students with good track records. Fred Zambrano, at-risk coordinator for the schools, has asked the school district to boost the 60-student capacity of the alternative learning center by 50 percent. The center houses students referred for discipline, attendance, poor grades and other offenses. But being part of a gang is still a reality in Donna , Zambrano said. "When they come (to the center) from high school or junior high, nine times out of 10 when asked they will say, `Yes, I'm either a gang member or I hang out with gang members,' " Zambrano said. In hopes of diminishing the gangs' sway on youth, Donna citizens are attempting to revitalize the Boys and Girls Club housed in an old National Guard armory. "Donna needs to take care of the kids," said Barbara Deschner, a Brooklyn, N.Y., native who was hired last month to run the club. "They need activities for children, they need programs, they need services, they need a safety net in place. "These kids don't have anything to fall back on. They come from the poorest homes in the country, unemployment is horrible. They don't know what it's like to be successful." Deschner said she was appalled to learn that 80 percent of the children who come to the club have never left town, not even to visit nearby South Padre Island or a museum or zoo. "The needs, the wants and the desire are out there," she said. "The money is not. "Right now I'd like to take the kids to see the ocean, but we don't have any transportation. We couldn't even take them to the city pool if there was one." The club operates almost entirely on grants from outside the town, and Deschner has no illusions about the availability of local funding. Instead, she is applying for more grants and trying to bring a host of youth reading and sports programs underwritten by large corporations. The club is also looking for a surplus school bus to shuttle kids from outlying colonias into town to use the facilities. "I'm trying to do this on $64,000 a year, and to serve these kids properly I'd need $250,000 a year. But the community is in such an impoverished condition that there's no money to raise," she said. But the townsfolk are doing what they can. The police association held a benefit barbecue and donated the proceeds to the club. Volunteers have removed the club's boarded-up windows during a cleanup two weeks ago. Some city officials, like tax collector Simmons, believe the political bickering has shifted the focus from improving the community and brought unwarranted negative attention to the town. "Poor Donna just gets kicked around, and I blame a lot of it on politics," said Simmons. "These groups are just too busy fighting among themselves, getting their people (elected), and they're not thinking about the community." But the consequences of ignoring the needs of Donna 's youth are too great to ignore, warns Deschner. "We either build them up, or we build prisons." - --- MAP posted-by: Pat Dolan