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WORKING AS A REGION

What makes NIMBY ( "Not In My Back Yard" ) disputes so hard to mediate is that typically there are sincere, well-meaning people on both sides.

That was certainly the case when Transitions Inc.  recently proposed putting a long-term residential drug treatment facility for about 100 men in the Latonia neighborhood of Covington.  Transitions included the county-owned property on its application to state officials who are trying to figure out where to place 10 such facilities as part of Gov.  Ernie Fletcher's Recovery Kentucky initiative.

The facility is certainly needed in Northern Kentucky.

Not a week goes by, it seems, where there's not another drug arrest or obituary for a drug addict who overdosed.  And testimony at recent public hearings gave painful glimpses at the agony suffered by families across the region touched by drug addiction.

Transitions, a non-profit doing the Lord's work in Bellevue, has only 40 such beds and has a four-month waiting list for those beds.  Executive Director Mac McArthur is frustrated at having to turn away people who need a hand to save themselves.

But you can't blame Latonia residents for feeling anxious.  Drug addicts who are sincere about turning their lives around deserve compassion and help, but addicts are also unpredictable and sometimes criminally minded.  That's the nature of being an addict.  A home for 100 men at the lowest point of their lives is a home for 100 potentially unstable people.  That's hard to dispute.  Parents are protective of their children, children protective of their elderly parents, and everyone is worried about the neighborhood.

In the face of opposition from City Hall and residents, Transitions is looking for another site, although it hasn't completely given up on the location near Rosedale Manor Nursing Home in Latonia.  Time is short.  The state is about ready to pick locations, and it will favor those that have the support of the surrounding community.

Covington says it was surprised by the proposed site and Kenton County's endorsement as the government "sponsor" of Transitions' proposal.  There should have been no surprise.  This region should have gotten together, like we urged it to do back in January, to find a site amenable to all.

Our governments need to learn to talk to each other, and the region needs to learn to solve - as a group - controversial problems.  We hope Northern Kentucky doesn't lose its chance at the money to build this drug treatment facility because officials were unwilling to do so.

Transitions isn't the bad guy here, nor are the Latonia residents.  The bad guy is drug addiction, and this region needs to figure out a way to solve it, together.