Statues in Somervilleโ€™s Davis Square, where residents have worried about drug use, on Wednesday. (Photo: Marc Levy)

There was a time city councilor Judy Pineda Neufeld could roll out her picnic blanket and take her toddler to her closest Somerville park relatively worry free. Now Neufeld joins her Ward 7 constituents in expressing concern around open drug use and harassment seen in Davis Square and Seven Hills Park.

The councilโ€™s Public Health and Safety Committee met Wednesday to discuss six motions for solutions around improper drug needle disposal, safety concerns and open drug use that were proposed at an Aug. 22 council meeting. Charles Femino, interim chief of police, also gave attendees a summary of what his officers have seen in the parks this summer.

Since the councilโ€™s meeting last month, the police department has conducted 379 activities, including 300 patrols in Seven Hills Park and Davis Square and on the Community Path up to the Cambridge line, Femino said.

Police efforts follow an April 2021 council order prioritizing treatment over arrest for drug possession and incarceration, Femino said. But in the past two weeks, police have added uniformed and undercover officers patrols of unhoused encampments in Davis Square and Seven Hills Park and spent close to 100 hours observing the area, acting each time they saw drug distribution regardless of the amount, Femino said.

Two arrests were made Sept. 5 for drug dealing, one after police saw a โ€œhand-to-hand transaction of a small amount of drugs.โ€ Another person was seen conducting what appeared to be a drug deal on Sept. 7, Femino said. The sale was stopped, but the person was arrested a few days later on a warrant.

Somerville city councilor Judy Pineda Neufeld at a February 8 meeting. (Photo: Julia Levine)

Neufeld said she was keeping her promise to her constituents to voice their concerns and frustrations with the โ€œall-hours-of-the-day problemโ€ of open drug use, harassment and inappropriate behavior.

Constituents have sent videos of Somerville police officers being โ€œniceโ€ when patrolling the area, and Neufeld questioned if people return to Davis Square and Seven Hills Park because they feel the police are lenient.

One policy discussed was to โ€œestablish guidelines that will assist officers and supervisors in understanding the benefits of diversion versus prosecution for minor drug possession offenses.โ€ Neufeld asked police officers if a more forceful message is within the policyโ€™s guidelines, since she feels the policy is โ€œbeing interpreted in a way that allows for open drug use, open selling and use and distribution of drugs in our parks, which is surrounded by youth and families.โ€

Compassion over โ€œterrorizingโ€

People in the park may have complex histories leading to their current circumstances, Femino reminded the committee. โ€œI believe they donโ€™t want to be there, whether it be using drugs or as part of an encampment. What weโ€™re trying to do as a city is to address this in a way so that we can look beneath the tip of the iceberg and address some of the issues for these people who donโ€™t want to be there. Weโ€™re trying to provide services. But again, if thereโ€™s something that is a violation of law, that is an arrestable offense,โ€ Femino said.

Residents such as Rivka Lapidus, a doctor, commended the city for taking a compassionate approach to combating substance use disorder. โ€œI absolutely support resources and not pushing people out or stigmatizing or imprisoning them,โ€ Lapidus said. After moving to Somerville in 1980, Lapidus worked at a methadone clinic, when stigma around drug use was at an all-time high. Her experiences have led her to believe that pushing people out and โ€œterrorizing themโ€ is not the way forward, she said.

Neufeld urged her fellow committee members to avoid conflating homelessness with drug use, since not all people experiencing homelessness use drugs and vice versa. Items on the agenda acknowledged that distinction, councilor Lance Davis said. โ€œWe’re on the same page,โ€ Davis said. โ€œThe primary safety issues are related to substance use.โ€

Influx of homeless

Homelessness did get some discussion, with Femino saying that police finding an unhoused person in a public park would likely extend resources and compassion. The Somerville Homeless Coalition is doing outreach as well.

Hannah Oโ€™Halloran, director of homeless services for the coalition, said its engagement center sees 35 to 40 visitors each day. โ€œOur team is continuing to develop relationships with everybody, get people connected to public benefits whether itโ€™s food stamps, health insurance, as well as getting them on housing wait lists,โ€ Oโ€™Halloran said.

An influx of homeless to Somerville and Cambridge was blamed for a time on Bostonโ€™s efforts in 2021 to break up its โ€œMass and Cassโ€ homeless encampment. People sleeping outside in Somerville now say something else: They are here after being uprooted from Cambridgeโ€™s Central Square, where Carl Barron Plaza is being renovated and โ€œthey’ve started to, as defined by some people, crack down on homelessness,โ€ Oโ€™Halloran said.

While most residents hold compassion for those experiencing homelessness or substance use disorder, speakers said, it ends when behavior becomes too disruptive and they feel their safety is threatened. Like Neufeld, some constituents are afraid to walk through the parks and said the wanted a return to days community spaces could be used for their intended purposes.

Residents speak

While the meeting wasnโ€™t a formal public hearing, more than 100 residents logged on hoping to speak directly to the committee, making Wednesdayโ€™s crowd the largest the committee hasย  experienced, councilor Matthew McLaughlin said.

Blair Galinsky lives along the bike path and said heโ€™s โ€œseen contorted unconscious people every day, heard screaming at nighttime, heard cursing at all hours, seen the stealing of Amazon packages, seen the breaking into of cars, public intoxication and passed-out bodies.โ€ He calls these instances โ€œscary and unpredictable.โ€

Stefan, an 18-year-old high school senior, detailed the needles heโ€™s seen littering paths, feces on the ground and fights breaking out, creating a sharp contrast to the park he remembers visiting as a child. Stefan told the committee he felt less safe visiting the park now than he did at 12.

The committee didnโ€™t discuss plans for an overdose prevention center, as councilor Lance Davis said thereโ€™s โ€œno real movement at this stage.โ€ However, the city plans to continue providing resources to help treat the root causes of addiction.

Kimberly Hutter, legislative liaison for Mayor Katjana Ballantyne, assured councilors theyโ€™ll get written updates as needed, especially about container for used drug needles. The cityโ€™s goal remains โ€œbeing compassionate and acknowledging the underlying root causes of issues and while also addressing the short-term effects that are having on the community,โ€ Hutter said.

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5 Comments

  1. Most homeless are mentally ill or otherwise unable to care for themselves ‘in the wild,’ so to speak. The compassionate thing would be to take them into custody and give them services there.

  2. It’s a fair point that treatment should be prioritized over arrest. But these “compassionate” policies are not actually delivering treatment at anywhere close to the necessary effectiveness and scale, they are simply instructing the police to turn a blind eye. This is the worst of both worlds

  3. Lawlessness is becoming the norm in Somerville. We now have groups of masked, biking teens, shooting people with pellets from so-called air-soft guns, including someone who was reportedly shot in the eye while walking in Argenziano Park. Time to RE-fund the police and to rethink the policy of โ€œcompassionate policing.โ€

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