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Neighborhood clubs block drug activity.


The 900 block of North Ridgeway A ridgeway is a road or path that follows the highest part of the landscape. Roads and pathways
  • One of the best known ridgeways is the Ridgeway National Trail, also known as The Ridgeway Path
 Avenue is quiet, with little traffic. A welcome sign tells visitors that drugs, loud music, alcohol drinking and repairing cars are not allowed. Yard lights illuminate il·lu·mi·nate  
v. il·lu·mi·nat·ed, il·lu·mi·nat·ing, il·lu·mi·nates

v.tr.
1. To provide or brighten with light.

2. To decorate or hang with lights.

3.
 the street, and there are permit parking signs every few steps. The street corners are vacant.

Eight years ago, however, things were different, residents say. There were dice games
This article is about dice games in general. For the game on The Price Is Right, please see Dice Game (pricing game).


Dice games are games that use or incorporate a die as their sole or central component, usually as a random device.
 being played in the middle of the block, and the street was congested con·gest·ed
adj.
Affected with or characterized by congestion.


congested ENT adjective Referring to a boggy blood-filled tissue. See Nasal congestion.
 with traffic as people double-parked their cars to buy drugs.

"We just got tired of it. You couldn't even go outside your door," said Willie Harvey, 70, president of the block club for the 900 block of North Ridgeway. "We were like, 'We have to do something."'

Harvey's block is located in the 11th Police District, which is bordered by Lake Street and Kedzie, North and Cicero avenues on Chicago's West Side. The district, which includes the West Humboldt Park neighborhood, leads the city in narcotics narcotics n. 1) techinically, drugs which dull the senses. 2) a popular generic term for drugs which cannot be legally possessed, sold, or transported except for medicinal uses for which a physician or dentist's prescription is required.  arrests, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 police data.

But the drugs are rarely found on Harvey's block and many others nearby The reason: Well-organized block clubs have discouraged dis·cour·age  
tr.v. dis·cour·aged, dis·cour·ag·ing, dis·cour·ag·es
1. To deprive of confidence, hope, or spirit.

2. To hamper by discouraging; deter.

3.
 drug dealers, suggests a Chicago Reporter analysis of crime data.

"There are certain blocks where you don't hear the calls of 'rocks and blows' [for crack cocaine and heroin heroin (hĕ`rəwən), opiate drug synthesized from morphine (see narcotic). Originally produced in 1874, it was thought to be not only nonaddictive but useful as a cure for respiratory illness and morphine addiction, and capable of relieving ] and those are the ones with strong block clubs," said Bill Howard, executive director of the West Humboldt Park Family and Community Development Council, which promotes economic development in the neighborhood. Howard and others are working to create more block clubs in the area.

Police received no reports of drug activity on Harvey's block during the six-month period from November 2002 to April 2003, according to a Reporter analysis of preliminary crime data found on the Chicago Police Department's Web site. In the 15block area surrounding sur·round  
tr.v. sur·round·ed, sur·round·ing, sur·rounds
1. To extend on all sides of simultaneously; encircle.

2. To enclose or confine on all sides so as to bar escape or outside communication.

n.
 Harvey's block, those with block clubs averaged 6.3 reports of drug activity, while those without averaged more than three times as many, according to the data.

"Being concerned about your neighborhood, getting the people to clean up your neighborhood, will curb drug activity," said Dana V. Starks, commander of the 11th Police District. "A lot of times, drug dealers will look for areas that are unkempt."

The change was not immediate for Harvey's block. In 1995, when drug dealers often stood in front of their homes, Almeta Levy, 70, and about five other women started the block club.

When the women asked the dealers to leave, they just moved to the street corner and continued to sell drugs, Levy said. Once Harvey and a few other men joined the block club, they approached the dealers again.

They didn't demand that the dealers stop selling drugs, Harvey said. He told them residents didn't want "that sort of thing" happening on their block. And some of the dealers left, he said. "Some of them I could talk to like I talk to my kids and some of them I couldn't."

To discourage the dealers who remained, about eight residents began to do "positive loitering Loitering (IPA pronunciation: ['lɔɪtəˌrɪŋ] is an intransitive verb meaning to stand idly, to stop numerous times, or to delay and procrastinate. ." Every Saturday, for seven weeks in a row, they walked their block--sweeping the sidewalks and standing on the corners where drugs were sold. Levy said the drug dealers, eventually stopped coming.

The club became more active as well, Harvey said. Residents started attending police beat meetings, crime and safety meetings, and other community organization gatherings.

Block club members notified other residents of the changes they were making and posted their block club sign at one end of the block. Some residents installed wrought iron wrought iron: see iron.
wrought iron

One of the two forms in which iron is obtained by smelting. Wrought iron is a soft, easily worked, fibrous metal. It usually contains less than 0.1% carbon and 1–2% slag.
 fencing fencing, sport of dueling with foil, épée, and saber. Modern Fencing


The weapons and rules of modern fencing evolved from combat weapons and their usage.
 around their property to keep dealers from running through their yards to get to the alleys.

They also posted a "We Call Police" sign in a window of an unoccupied building where, Harvey said, crowds would gather to sell drugs and hold dice games.

Block club members exchanged phone numbers and formed a phone tree. When someone spotted a drug dealer, every block club member would get a call about it.

The block club also collected signatures from at least two-thirds of the block's residents to get permit parking, which stopped visitors from double-parking their cars, Harvey said.

Harvey's block partnered with the 800 and 1000 blocks of North Ridgeway for meetings, parties and clean-ups.

For the last five years Harvey's block has not had a problem with drug dealers, but he notes that drugs are still being sold in the alley alley

an area in a cow barn identified by its particular purpose such as a loafing alley, a walking alley or feeding alley.
 of a neighboring neigh·bor  
n.
1. One who lives near or next to another.

2. A person, place, or thing adjacent to or located near another.

3. A fellow human.

4. Used as a form of familiar address.

v.
 block.

"Now you don't see anyone standing outside selling drugs," Harvey said. "I know it is because of the things that we have been doing and the people we have talked to."

Dedicated People

Roslynn Phillips, 56, has tried for years to get rid of the drugs in the 700 block of North Monticello Avenue, where she lives and serves as block club president.

She has seen it all.

For months Phillips noticed a cab making a stop on her block each morning to buy drugs from men on the corner. There was once an abandoned van on one end of the block. The van's owner had moved and left it there, Phillips said. She believes dealers were using the van to hide their drugs.

She said dealers used to sell drugs to a steady flow of customers in a vacant lot, which sat directly across the street from an elementary school elementary school: see school. . "It looked like people were buying groceries gro·cer·y  
n. pl. gro·cer·ies
1. A store selling foodstuffs and various household supplies.

2. groceries Commodities sold by a grocer.
," Phillips said.

Lately, the cab has stopped coming, she said. And the city cleaned up the lot and had the van removed, Phillips said. But when one problem disappears another seems to take its place.

Unlike Harvey, Phillips--known to many of her neighbors as "Roz"--has not had much success recruiting other block club members. She does all the planning for her block club.

"I have meetings every month. I only get one or two people, but I'm not giving up," said Phillips, who has lived alone since her husband died and her two adult children moved out. "I might not get anyone to come, but I'm going to keep going with it."

Some activists encounter fear when they try to organize residents into block clubs.

Barbara Parks, a community organizer for the Chicago Alternative Policing Strategy Chicago Alternative Policing Strategy (CAPS) was started in 1993 as a pilot program in five diverse neighborhoods. A year later, CAPS was implemented across Chicago. The goal of CAPS is to blend traditional policing strategies with “alternative” strategies aimed at  (CAPS) in the 11th Police District, said residents tell her that "'we can't get it together because most of the people on the block are selling the drugs."'

Even on Harvey's block, residents were reluctant to call the police on drug dealers, he said.

"Sometimes calling the police doesn't help because the police will come right to the house where the call came from and ask 'Where did you say they were selling drugs?"' Levy said.

Starks said officers often rely on residents to tell them where the dealers have hidden their drugs. Dealers often don't hold the drugs, he said. They take money from customers and then tell them where they can find the drugs.

"They put them by trees.... They put them around the edges where the sidewalk A Microsoft service that was launched in 1997 to provide online arts and entertainment guides on the Web for major cities worldwide. In 1999, Microsoft sold Sidewalk to Ticketmaster, which continued to provide guides, ticketing and other information to the MSN network.  and the grass meet ... [and] on the back of tires," Starks said. "They use people's gas tanks."

Still, Parks insists that all it takes is three dedicated people to start and run a successful block club.

"We'll do a clean-up or a march or a prayer vigil vigil (vĭj`əl) [Lat.,=watch], in Christian calendars, eve of a feast, a day of penitential preparation. In ancient times worshipers gathered for vespers before a great feast and then waited outside the church until dawn for the liturgy (Mass). ," said Parks, who works with block clubs in the area.

"We can do a street action where we'll do a smoke-out. You just stand out there with a grill Grill may refer to:

In food:
  • Grill (cooking), a device or surface used for cooking food, usually fueled by gas or charcoal.
  • Grilling, a form of cooking that involves direct heat.
  • A restaurant that serves grilled food, such as a "bar and grill".
 going [and] barbeque some hot dogs," Parks said. "You just hang out on that corner and hold down that spot for three hours."

Phillips would like for her block club to hold parties and transform one of the block's vacant lots into a community garden.

For more than 30 years, Phillips has lived on the block where her father was once the block club president. But her patience is growing thin.

"I want to get away," she said. "I'm so tired of over here."

Super Block

Several agencies came together in 1996 to clear drug dealers from the corners and vacant lots in the 800 block of North Harding Avenue.

The effort, dubbed dub 1  
tr.v. dubbed, dub·bing, dubs
1. To tap lightly on the shoulder by way of conferring knighthood.

2. To honor with a new title or description.

3.
 the "Super Block Project," involved the city of Chicago, police officers from the 11th District, the West Humboldt Park Family and Community Development Council, and Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago, a nonprofit A corporation or an association that conducts business for the benefit of the general public without shareholders and without a profit motive.

Nonprofits are also called not-for-profit corporations. Nonprofit corporations are created according to state law.
 agency that helps poor families with home ownership.

But their first step was to involve the residents by forming a block club.

Next, the city built new curbs and sidewalks. Neighborhood Housing Services provided loans for residents to buy and improve their homes. The police provided extra patrols. And Barbara Scott, the block club's president, organized block clean-ups.

Four vacant lots were converted into a park that was named after then-11th District Commander Douglass Bolling, who created the Super Block Project as a way to rid the area of drugs and violence a block at a time.

When the vacant lots disappeared, so did the drug dealers, Scott said. "[Seven] years ago, this block was one of the worst ones. Drugs were sold on each corner. No one really took the initiative, until the 11th District [did]."

The block has been drug-free ever since, she said.

"Everyone should have grass in front of their house, and everyone should be able to sit on their front porch porch

Roofed structure, usually open at front and sides, projecting from the face of a building and used to protect an entrance. If colonnaded, it may be called a portico.
 if they chose to and not have to hear 'rocks and blows' all night," said Scott.

Howard is confident that a strong block club can curb neighborhood drug activity.

In January, Howard and his staff, including Parks, started the West Humboldt Park Block Club Organizing Institute The AFL-CIO Organizing Institute (best known as "the Organizing Institute," and often as simply "the OI") is a unit within the Organizing and Field Services Department of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations. . Through the institute, they recruit residents to start block clubs and give them instructions. They also help the residents file paperwork to gain tax-exempt status and explain the roles of block club officers.

This year, the institute has established contact with more than 15 block clubs in the neighborhood, said Howard. Eventually, be would like for the block clubs to work with area businesses and publish a neighborhood newsletter.

"The whole effort is much bigger than just block clubs," Howard said. "It's about people seeing themselves, trying to show people that you can make it. That's what it's all about."
COPYRIGHT 2003 Community Renewal Society
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Mister, Chloe
Publication:The Chicago Reporter
Geographic Code:1U3IL
Date:Jul 1, 2003
Words:1692
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