Tracknum: 17070.3f4fdd7f.92bb8a2d
Pubdate: Fri, 29 Aug 2003
Source: Honolulu Advertiser (HI)
Copyright: 2003 The Honolulu Advertiser, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.
Contact:  http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/195
Author: James Gonser, Advertiser Urban Honolulu Writer
Note: To read about the "ice epidemic" in Hawaii, go to
http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Hawaii .

WEED & SEED EXPANSION APPROVED 

The U.S. Department of Justice has approved the expansion of the Weed & Seed
law enforcement program from the Kalihi-Palama/Chinatown site both west into
Kalihi Valley and east into the Ala Moana area.

U.S. Attorney Ed Kubo made the announcement yesterday at Central Middle School
and said the program has been very effective in fighting crime and rebuilding
troubled neighborhoods by bringing federal money and federal penalties to bear.

Officials say the designation will be key to cleaning up an area where Kubo
said drug violations are more than double the state average and the number of
family offenses, including domestic violence, outstrip those statewide.

Since the Kalihi-Palama/Chinatown site launched in 1998, crimes such as
homicide, rape, robbery and assault have dropped as much as 75 percent, Kubo
said. Community restoration projects in the area include upgrades to public
housing and parks, job training programs and neighborhood cleanups.

Weed & Seed is a coordinated effort among city, state and federal law
enforcement agencies and residents to target violent crime, drug abuse and gang
activity. Official designation brings federal money to fight crime and tough
federal penalties for violations in the area -- the "weed" side -- combined
with crime prevention and efforts at intervention, treatment and neighborhood
revitalization to "seed" a safer community, said Maile Kanemaru, Hawai'i Weed &
Seed executive director.

"We are very proud of the changes that the Weed & Seed strategy has brought
about in our communities," Kanemaru said. "People are building stronger
partnerships and taking pride in their neighborhoods. But there is still much
work to be done for the continued success of Weed & Seed."

The original site included an area from Nu'uanu Avenue to the Kapalama Canal
between the H-1 Freeway and North King Street and Dillingham Boulevard.

The expanded area will include areas all the way to Kalakaua Avenue and the
Convention Center in the east and to Kalihi Street and most of Kalihi Valley in
the west.

The population of the new site is 58,421. It includes 17 public housing
complexes, home to half O'ahu's public housing residents, who are considered an
at-risk group.

Farrington and McKinley high schools are included in the new area, where
students are at risk for anti-social behavior including criminal activity and
drug use, according to a 2001 state Board of Education study. At Farrington,
42.6 percent of the student body have reported gang involvement.

"Drugs and illegal guns are the two most dangerous threats to the safety of the
people of Hawai'i," Kubo said. "As we move into the next phase of Weed & Seed,
our focus is to get even tougher on drug-related crimes in Hawai'i's
communities by cracking down on gun violence as well."

Milo Saole knows that Weed & Seed works.

Her son was 23 years old when he was the arrested for selling drugs in Kalihi.
He was the first person arrested in the then-new Weed & Seed district and
served a year in prison for his crime. Saole said the tough punishment helped
because it got him out of the area and away from the criminal element. Today he
is clean and sober, she said.

"He learned. He completely stopped," Saole said. "I very much support Week &
Seed. It is safe now to walk the streets."

A second Weed & Seed site was designated in late 2000 in Waipahu, where drug
crimes have fallen by 78 percent. The 'Ewa site, the third on O'ahu, got
started in September 2002. There are more than 351 Weed & Seed sites in 46
states.

The expansion was approved after a visit by a U.S. Justice Department official
last month, which capped an 18-month application process.

The community has developed a strategic plan to create a safe community, reduce
poverty, improve economic development and provide support services for at-risk
youth.

Next, Kanemaru said, the community's committees and law enforcement groups will
finalize plans for the expanded areas, including patrol and policing efforts,
grant applications and a starting date for the federal penalties.

Signs will be placed at designated entry points to the new Weed & Seed areas to
let residents and criminals know they are entering a special crime-fighting
area.

"We've seen the success of Weed & Seed in the Kalihi area and realized that by
simply sharing ideas and working together we can take it upon ourselves to make
a difference and improve the quality of life in our own neighborhoods,"
resident Cindy Rasmussen said.