Pubdate: Mon, 21 Mar 2005
Source: Sentinel And Enterprise, The (MA)
Copyright: 2005 MediaNews Group, Inc. and Mid-States Newspapers, Inc.
Contact:  http://sentinelandenterprise.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2498
Author: Hillary Chabot
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

DRUG DEALING A MINORITY BUSINESS?

Adrian Ford, executive director of 3 Pyramids Inc., in Fitchburg, 
acknowledges many of the people arrested for selling drugs are minorities. 
"You can't dispel the fact that that exists. It's well known that we look 
into the paper at two things, the death page and the arrest and court log 
to see if there is someone we know," Ford said.

But the majority of drug users are white, according to Gardner Lt. Gerald 
Poirier. Poirier is one of the leading officers on the North Central 
Worcester County Drug Task Force.

"The average narcotics user is a white, average middle-class male," Poirier 
said. "There are people in the work force getting money and blowing it." 
The amount of young drug addicts are also mainly white, said Gregg Nadeau, 
a member of the state police's gang unit.

Roughly 66 percent of heroin addicts were white, 8.4 percent were black, 
21.2 percent were Latino, and 3.8 percent were of other races, according to 
Massachusetts Department of Public Health. Public health officials studied 
adults who received treatment for their substance abuse in 2003. Hurting 
their own community Former gang member Juan Rivera, who is Puerto Rican, 
stopped dealing drugs and hanging out with gang members in 2003 when he 
realized he was hurting fellow Latinos. "(Gangs are) hurting their own 
community; we're killing our own kind. If you're angry, go be angry and do 
something useful. How many of our people are involved in politics?" Juan 
Rivera said.

"Right now I only have $15 in my pocket, but I feel a lot better than when 
I had $500 from heroin," Juan Rivera said. "People get involved with drugs 
in terms of the money they can make. ... The thing is we need to give these 
kids the opportunity to make money, to give them something to do so they 
don't have to go to drugs. I'm trying to be that person, to get out of that 
mold so kids don't have to be high risk."

Time on their hands Miggie Velez, the coordinator of youth programs for the 
Spanish American Center in Leominster, runs after-school programs to try 
and prevent kids from getting involved with gangs and drugs.

"Young people who have a single parent who works a double shift have too 
much time on their hands. They can either hit the streets or go to 
programs," Velez said. "After 2:35 p.m., kids can come here."

Velez said she is proud of the program and the kids who attend it. "In the 
past 10 years, I have never had a child in my program become pregnant. 
That's significant," Velez said. "If you talk to my kids, 100 percent of 
them don't do drugs, but they can tell you what the drug of choice is in 
school, and they can all tell you they know someone who sells or uses. If 
you have that many kids telling you they all know someone who sells or 
uses, you have a problem." Poverty and isolation Ford said the connection 
between minorities and drugs is based on a lack of opportunities.

"The root causes of a lot of these things are poverty and isolation within 
the community," Ford said. "It's hard to talk about crime in the community 
without talking about joblessness, particularly in a minority community." 
Ford said the minority community in the region is growing, but the 
community programs for minority youths aren't.

"Almost half of our population is very young, and the teenage unemployment 
rate in urban areas is double or triple that of white teenage 
unemployment," Ford said. "Kids want money. There is a high dropout rate 
and no jobs, so the underground drug trade has become like a dual economy. 
It puts people to work." Ford said he feels just as many white people are 
involved in the drug trade, but they are not selling on street corners and, 
therefore, not arrested as often. "If I'm out there selling drugs, and I'm 
visible, of course I'm going to get arrested and show up disproportionately 
in the paper," Ford said. Javier Rivera, who is not related to Juan Rivera, 
is a 19-year-old Fitchburg resident who works at Juice Cuts Barber Shop in 
Fitchburg. Javier Rivera believes many white people are involved in selling 
drugs. "A lot of times you get the drugs from the white guy up in the 
hills, but he's a little bit smarter so he doesn't get arrested," Javier 
Rivera said. "I don't think drug dealing breaks down to race, I think it 
breaks down to money and opportunity or no money and no opportunity."

Because the majority of the people buying drugs are white, Ford said 
everyone shares the blame of the drug trade.

"Why do we just look at the distributors? We should also look at who's 
buying it. Sure there's a disproportionate amount of minorities doing the 
selling, but it takes two," Ford said.

Still racism Velez said racism is still strong in the area.

She said a man spat at her in the Mall at Whitney Field when she was with 
her children only two years ago.

"It was devastating. The lowest form to degrade a human is to get spit in 
the face, and I went through it," Velez said.

Velez said she does think police use racial profiling when trying to arrest 
drug dealers and gang members.

"My kids will come in here with the baggy jeans, the hoods, the colors, and 
they're honors students. Hey, if they are Puerto Rican they fit the whole 
ensemble. They're there," Velez said. "They get stopped on the street on 
their way over here. Based on how they look and the color of their skin, 
they stand out." Ford said he feels many people believe minorities are 
connected to gangs and drugs because that's what they see on television.

"There's this profile in people's minds," Ford said. "When we talk about 
solving the problem, it's like, 'How can you help me when your image of me 
is mainly in handcuffs?' The idea that we like living like this and gang 
banging for our children is ridiculous."

But Nadeau said he doesn't look at race. "We target criminal activity; we 
don't look at race," Nadeau said. "We don't get into why people do what 
they do."

Fitchburg Police Chief Edward Cronin said he knows most members of the 
Latino community are hard working.

"There are tons of hard-working people that are Latinos or black," Cronin 
said. "I think the situation is if a person who is dealing drugs is a 
minority, naturally the people they are going to network with will be from 
their own nationality."

Us against the world Juan Rivera, the former drug dealer, said he felt like 
it was him and his gang brothers against society.

"I call it a disease, a virus that lives in my head," Juan Rivera said. 
"When talking about crime, I'm programmed not to tell on my people. I 
think, 'I don't want to turn on my people. But really, what am I doing for 
my people?'" Juan Rivera said many minorities in the area turn to selling 
drugs and other criminal activities because they feel they don't have 
support to do something else with their lives.

"I looked at the playground (a rundown playground in the neighborhood where 
he grew up) and realized the city doesn't care about me, why should I care 
about them? It was us against them," Juan Rivera said. "The music, the 
whole culture around gangster stuff, that's us. We're rebelling against 
society." But Juan Rivera also admits he started dealing drugs because it 
was an easier and more lucrative job than delivering newspapers or 
shoveling driveways. "It was me being lazy. I didn't want to get up and go 
to work, I wanted to stay up until 2 a.m. and sleep late," Juan Rivera 
said. Juan   Rivera said he had no role models as a child and felt 
abandoned by the largely white population around him.

"When I was in school, the guidance counselor would talk to me about what I 
wanted to do. I looked at him and thought, 'How can you relate? You don't 
deal with the next-door neighbor always stealing your stuff to get high or 
the drug dealing I see on the street,'" Juan Rivera said.

Latinos in the local community don't speak up about violence and crime 
because they feel police aren't on their side, Juan Rivera said. "At one 
time we couldn't go to the cops because the cops didn't care, so we just 
stayed silent," Juan Rivera said. "It's a culture of 'If it doesn't bother 
me, then I don't care.'"

But Juan Rivera admits some Latinos don't want to take responsibility for 
their own actions and lives.

"Everybody needs to take responsibility for their own part. I believe I get 
stereotyped, but instead of doing the right thing, I let that happen," Juan 
Rivera said. "I was a gang member; I was a drug dealer. It was the fad, the 
money." But the 25-year-old encourages others to break the stereotypes. "If 
you feel like someone is being racist toward you, get involved. You already 
know if you just hit the cop or the mayor, you'll go to jail," he said. 
Javier Rivera is starting a program with the owner of Juice Cuts Barber 
Shop on Day Street in Fitchburg to give kids some thing to do after school 
gets out, an option he never had.

The program is to let kids DJ in the barber shop while people get their 
hair cut, Javier Rivera said.

"They don't come to the barbershop just to cut their hair. They talk about 
everything here. They can talk and argue, but there's not fighting," Javier 
Rivera said.

Community outreach Bud Tackett, a community liaison for LUK Inc., said he 
tries to reach out to kids who might be   heading toward a life of drugs 
and crime. "We try to give kids access to different services. We'll do a 
lot of street one-on-ones where we'll see kids and just go up and start 
talking to them," Tackett said.

LUK, a multicultural, prevention, intervention, advocacy and treatment 
service leader for at-risk youths and their families, has a street outreach 
program where members walk around Fitchburg and Leominster and talk to 
kids. Tyrone Dudley, who grew up in Fitchburg and went to Fitchburg High 
School, is the street outreach supervisor and works with kids ages 10 to 
17. "I'll do one-on-one counseling. Everybody said Fitchburg has different 
gangs, but the most I see are groups, groups of kids," Dudley said. "Right 
now the worst area is Elm Street. Anybody can walk down there and see drug 
deals on the street and see kids drinking."

Tackett said the group offers a three-pronged approach to help kids. They 
combine the street outreach with the basic center services and the 
transitional living program.

Dudley is starting a flag-football program in May for kids who might not 
have the money to play high school sports.

"And don't think I'm not going to be on them every day talking about 
drugs," Dudley said.
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