Pubdate: Wed, 26 May 1999 Source: Washington Post (DC) Page: B01 Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Courtland Milloy SEEING THE GOOD A PRISON COULD BRING Joyce Scott recalls using a baseball bat to run drug dealers off the street near her home in Southeast Washington. Among those at whom she swung: her own son. "He used to work for a fast-food restaurant, but then his girlfriend left him for a drug dealer, so he started dealing drugs," Scott recalled. "I just couldn't stand it. He was my heartbreak, so I became his nightmare, running after him with a baseball bat." The bat didn't help, though. Her son eventually went to Lorton Correctional Complex in Virginia and returned to the District unrehabilitated. He became a repeat offender. At 12:30 one morning in January, Scott received a telephone call from D.C. General Hospital saying that her son had come in screaming with five bullet wounds to his upper body. He survived. But it took such a near-death experience to get him to finally go straight. As far as Scott is concerned, that's cutting it way too close. Now she wants to make sure that when District residents go to prison for drug-related offenses, they will get the help they need. As executive director of a group called Citizens for a Progressive Ward 8, Scott is spearheading a grass-roots effort to bring what she hopes will be a first-class correctional facility to Ward 8 in Southeast Washington. This has pitted Scott, 47, who had to leave Ballou High School after becoming pregnant with her son 29 years ago, against some of the most well-heeled, well-educated and influential people in the Washington area. Her opponents include D.C. Mayor Anthony A. Williams; Ward 8 community activist Eugene Kinlow Jr., whose father is a member of the D.C. financial control board; and a variety of environmentalists and no-growth advocates. But Scott, who went on to receive a general equivalency diploma, is undaunted. "I was invited to speak to the Green Party, and in the middle of my remarks, this man stands up and hoists up his pants and says, 'The only reason she wants this prison is because her son keeps getting locked up and she's just mad,' " Scott recalled. "I was so outdone. I took three giant steps towards him -- in the name of Jesus, of course -- and said, 'I can't think of a better reason to be involved.' " Scott has some powerful backers, too. The group seeking to build and manage the prison -- if the District and federal governments approve -- is the Corrections Corp. of America. John Ray, a former D.C. Council member, is the corporation's legal counsel. Scott was Ray's Ward 8 coordinator during his political campaigns. "When I was first approached by CCA about locating a prison in Southeast, the only thing I could see was Lorton, where my son had been, and that sent my blood pressure up," Scott recalled. "I said, 'No, no, no.' " But after being persuaded to visit a CCA-run facility in New Mexico, she changed her mind. "I have to tell you, I fell in love with the place," Scott recalled. "They had a therapeutic drug treatment program, plus it was cleaner than a hospital and more modern. The prison recreation room was better equipped than anything at Ballou, with musical instruments and everything." Current plans call for a 1,200-bed, minimum-security facility for adult male felons near the Anacostia River. It would feature two prison industries and a separate vocational school for Ward 8 residents. Prison opponents, however, can be just as persuasive. They would rather have a first-class high school or university in the ward. They also want a supermarket and a movie theater, and they say they are tired of Southeast Washington being a dumping ground for undesirable development. To which Scott replies: "Let's be realistic: Universities, supermarkets and movie theaters are not on the table. Only the Federal Bureau of Prisons has come in with money to spend. So I say let's make the most of what they have to offer." To those who say that a prison in Ward 8 will lower property values and cause middle-class residents to move out, Scott scoffs: Property values have only risen throughout the city, including the neighborhoods around the D.C. jail. "What we have to realize is that sending people away to be warehoused in other states only results in them returning to us meaner than junkyard dogs," Scott said. "If you want to ship something out, make it crack cocaine and firearms. Then you'll be doing something that makes a positive difference." As formidable an advocate as Scott is, she still has a sore spot that her adversaries like to home in on. "How do you expect to help other people's children when you couldn't help your own?" she was asked at one community forum. The question hurts. Although Scott doesn't talk about it publicly, it clearly bothers her that some would judge her harshly because her son got caught up in drugs, even though the children of some of her critics also have drug problems. Instead of going to prison, however, the children of the well-to-do get sent to expensive drug treatment facilities before they get into trouble with the law. That inequity just makes Scott more determined. "Out of my pain," she tells her critics, "I now have experience, strength and hope to share, along with a sincere desire to help the least among us." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D