Harison Place
Citizen Advocates
Calvin Luther Martin, PhD
June 6, 2024
Let me begin by saying: I support Citizen Advocates (CA)! Especially its housing program.
I think CA did a huge service to the village by tearing down a row of god-awful buildings and putting up a stunning apartment/commercial building. The design is breathtaking.
I hope the Harrison Place concept — the project — is a success.
What I say, below, is not intended to be a pot-shot at CA (Citizen Advocates) or its Harison Place project. Rather, what I say alarms and distresses me, and I hope and pray that CA can rise to the issue and fix it — if indeed it is a real issue, which, frankly, I don’t know if it is.
What I present, below, is an email I sent to Mayor Andrea Dumas and the Village Trustees some days ago. (I am still awaiting the mayor’s response. I assume she has, or will be, discussing this with CA.)
I present my letter (email) in the spirit of community discussion. I place no blame on anyone. We as a community — including me — need to pull together and get a grip on the issues discussed in my letter.
That said, I admit that I don’t have any good answers.
Dear Andrea and Trustees,
6 thoughts on “Harison Place”
Get yourself a police radio scanner and you’ll hear that the police are there almost daily. When fire department crews arrive to investigate an alarm, they have been harassed until the village police have to be called to protect them. There are incidents involving residents throwing trash down onto the street below.
Tell me, who is this place safe for?
My wife and I are currently tenants of Harrison place and we would love to discuss some things with you. This building needs help desperately and we don’t know what to do to make it happen.
Editor’s response: Oops! I just now spotted your comment. I’ll send you an email and you can tell me whatever you wish. Again, my apologies.
I sympathize with you. I hear about the activities there on my police radio scanner. It’s not a safe place to live.
Great article!!!!
And this is by no means isolated to Harison Place. With “mixed income” facilities popping up like weeds across the North Country, I can say with some knowledge that this happens not infrequently.
The Northwoods development in Plattsburgh, for example, was created as a mixed income facility with low-income and assisted income as part of its funding mandate. This past November the complex was raided and 100 grams of Fentanyl and 25 grams of Crack were seized and arrests were made.
The stark reality is that the North Country is inundated with illegal narcotics, and much of the problem is being brought here from the cities downstate and from out of state. Malone, in particular, is susceptible due to the people coming and going because of the prisons, and drugs and crime in general are on the rise.
Sadly, many of the “owners” of these facilities are not on-site after business hours, and criminality is given free rein. And these issues are not new. The “Projects” built in major cities during the 60s to 80s to relocate those displaced by the interstate highway system became the breeding grounds for the drug trade, distribution and dependence.
To think that the trend isn’t transferable to smaller developments is ignorance. And despite the mission of agencies like Citizen Advocates to assist the poor and struggling, it is hamstrung by those who look to exploit these developments for their own gain at the cost of others’ humanity. And even though this is a new building, it seems that the same trends are already starting which lead to the fire which destroyed its predecessor.
Is there a solution? It’s hard to say. Increasing security with full-time, round the clock, on-site security staff would be a start, but the bleeding hearts could claim, with some legitimacy, class discrimination. And the cost of such a staffing would hamper the efforts of Citizen Advocates to provide low-income dwellings to begin with. But it would act as a constant and first-line deterrent. Many places have “doormen” or lobby staff to create a more safe environment for residents; people who get to know the residents, can report suspicious behavior, while maintaining a friendly and supportive role to residents who do not want criminality near their homes.
The drug problem, however, is a larger issue than one building and as a community we must act together to clean our town and the region of the blight of illegal narcotics and the people who manufacture and distribute them. And we must support those who want to get clean by providing a community that fosters their recovery.
Editor’s response: Cogent analysis and well said! Thank you, Lars!
Calvin,
Bless your heart. Can you be at the board meeting? My hope for your town is it’s citizens do as you do, show up and care.