Pubdate: Wed, 21 Apr 1999 Source: York Daily Record (PA) Copyright: 1999 The York Daily Record Contact: http://www.ydr.com/ AGREEMENT CAUSES METHADONE CLINIC TO LOOK ELSEWHERE Advanced treatment Systems is looking at six other sites in York County to locate the clinic. The six people crowded behind the podium all but kissed and made up. There will definitely not be a methadone clinic in the Tri-Hill Professional Center on South Queen Street, sang three political figures, a Spring Garden Township resident, a health official and a businessman at a Tuesday morning press conference. All parties involved in the four-month disagreement finally announced that Advanced Treatment Systems of Coatesville will find another location for the methadone clinic that the York-Adams Drug and Alcohol Program insists is needed - the same clinic that residents argued would invite criminals into the area and push property values down. Members of the group took turns congratulating each other. York-Adams Drug and Alcohol Program Administrator Steve Warren reiterated the need for a clinic, noting that 50 percent of York County's drug court cases revolve around heroin. Dr. Doug Schmitt wished Advanced Treatment Services good luck at a location away from his dentist office in Tri-Hill. Advanced Treatment Systems Executive Vice President Jeff Kegley thanked local residents for being kind. But then came the issue of where the methadone clinic will go, and things got strained again. "The proposed location was inappropriate," York County Commissioner Shirley Glass said. "(The clinic) will be in a more appropriate place in the future." York County Commissioner Christopher Reilly said he deemed it "appropriate" that the clinic be placed in a spot removed from residential neighborhoods. Kegley interjected that clients themselves wouldn't want to be near neighbors who view them as stigmatized. "It's best for us to relocate to an area where they can get the privacy they desire," he said. No one had any definites on where that new location would be. Kegley and Warren said they've been driving around the county together and have about six spots in mind. They would not comment on whether the new site will be in Spring Garden Township, but they are leaning toward a commercial or industrial zone with access to highways and bus service. Kegley said the clinic should open in a new site by June or July. He would not comment on how the business got out of its lease at 1601 S. Queen St. All involved laughed when asked how to avoid in the future the controversy that arose when Advanced Treatment Services announced its plans in January. "I was caught completely off guard by the reaction of the community to the site," said Warren, also of Spring Garden Township. "I thought that was a really good location. But in terms of the next time, we'll have to look beyond bricks and mortar." Warren also passed out handouts on facts about methadone treatment, dispelling the idea that crime would rise and that heroin addicts would loiter the streets. He cited that less than 15 percent of potential clients would come from downtown York. The rest would come from across the county. Having a clinic in the county would cut down on the $150,000 bill spent transporting and treating York County residents at the nearby Harrisburg clinic. When all was said and done, Bob Snider got up and smiled. A neighbor of Schmitt's, Snider said his home backs up to the lot where the clinic would have opened. "I like to work in the yard in the early morning," he said. "I was worried about property values and safety issues, so I'm thankful it's been moved." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea