Pubdate: Mon, 30 Sep 2002
Source: Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI)
Contact:  2002 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Website: http://www.starbulletin.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/196
Author: Genevieve A. Suzuki

EWA BANKS ON BENEFITS OF WEED & SEED

The Community Hopes To Reap The Same Gains As Kalihi And Waipahu

The Ewa community is trying to take the sting out of District 8 crime.

In 2000 it had the highest number of cases of any police district on Oahu
for negligent homicide, forcible rape, aggravated assault, arson, sex
offenses and family offenses, including domestic abuse.

Police, prosecutors and the community hope to see a drop in those numbers as
have other Oahu areas that have started Weed & Seed programs to raise
community awareness and establish intervention and prevention programs.

Ewa, Ewa Villages, Ewa Gentry and Ewa Beach launched a Weed & Seed program
Sept. 4 on Aloha United Way's Day of Caring by cleaning up graffiti and
trash and making improvements on the Ewa Community Center.

"There were a lot of people out there," said Ewa resident Michelle Kinimaka.
A bus full of children showed up that day to help with the cleanup of Ewa's
Oneula Beach Park, Kinimaka said.

"That's one of the things we've got to do is get the kids involved," said
Kinimaka, a case manager with Hale Kipa, a youth service organization. "We
need to think about what we can offer the kids and keep the kids out of
trouble."

Weed & Seed has been in Hawaii since 1998, when the Justice Department in
Washington, D.C., approved Kalihi-Palama/Chinatown as the first Weed & Seed
site, said Maile Kanemaru, the executive director of Weed & Seed Hawaii.
Waipahu was the second site, chosen in 1999.

The program has had success in its Kalihi and Waipahu sites.

Violent crime has decreased by 70 percent at the Kalihi-Palama/Chinatown
site since it became a Weed & Seed site, said police Maj. Mike Tucker of
District 1, which covers the Diamond Head side of Liliha Street to Nuuanu
Avenue.

"We just convicted a drug organization that was operating in the Weed & Seed
Waipahu site," said U.S. Attorney Edward Kubo Jr.

Federal and state agents recovered 26 pounds of crystal methamphetamine, or
ice, more than 30 firearms and more than $50,000 in cash at the bust. "As a
result, drug-related crimes in Waipahu dropped 80 percent in this last
year," Kubo said.

"I'm very confident we will start seeing similar positive results in the Ewa
community," Kubo said.

The "seed" portion of the program, which includes prevention, intervention
and neighborhood restoration, is especially important to Weed & Seed, Tucker
said.

"Drugs are so insidious that when we do put people away, there are always
people to take their place," Tucker said. "We can arrest people, but unless
the community gets involved -- that's the challenge."

It takes about a year for a neighborhood to become a Weed & Seed site
because the community has to invest in conducting surveys that determine its
assets and challenges.

Weed & Seed Hawaii requires everyone in the community to be involved, from
schools and businesses to residents and social agencies.

"It's a holistic approach to revitalizing the community," Kanemaru said.
There are 400 volunteers with Weed & Seed Hawaii.

In Ewa the community wants to eradicate drug dealing and public drinking,
and its neighborhood restoration committee wants to get rid of abandoned
vehicles and graffiti.

"We'd like to get a little more community involvement," Kinimaka said. Ewa
residents complain in community meetings that their neighbors are dealing
drugs, Kinimaka said. "All the neighbors are afraid to do anything about
it."

Kanemaru said the Police Department trains residents for the community
policing group. "You need to work with law enforcement for the total
package," Kanemaru said.

"A lot of my job is making sure we have a force and a presence in the Weed &
Seed area," Tucker said. Community members can get together and request
training workshops from the police.

Every community that is named a Weed & Seed site is given $175,000 by the
federal government.

"It isn't much," Kanemaru said. "It depends on collaboration and the
resources that already exist in the community."
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MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk