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A presentation by: Phillip Valentine in recovery since December 28, 1987 Executive Director, CCAR

The CCAR Experience. A presentation by: Phillip Valentine in recovery since December 28, 1987 Executive Director, CCAR . 21 Years. 21 Years. The further I get into recovery, the less I know. Things are not as black and white as I once thought. The gray area keeps expanding.

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A presentation by: Phillip Valentine in recovery since December 28, 1987 Executive Director, CCAR

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  1. TheCCARExperience A presentation by:Phillip Valentinein recovery since December 28, 1987Executive Director, CCAR

  2. 21 Years

  3. 21 Years • The further I get into recovery, the less I know. • Things are not as black and white as I once thought. The gray area keeps expanding. • Fishing is best when you’re not concerned about catching anything. • Gratitude is the antidote for the poison of resentment. • There’s no such thing as quality time with your children, there is only quantity. • The most important human relationship I have is with my wife. • Life is a series of phases. • Don’t let a kid with the stomach flu sleep on the top bunk.

  4. 21 Years • There is incredible wisdom and power in the experience, strength and hope in one person’s recovery. • I’m too old to fish while standing on slippery rocks. • Let your yes mean yes, and your no mean no. • I can get through anything “one day at a time”. • I didn’t get sober to be miserable. • People get into recovery and stay in recovery many different ways. • As your children get older, the house becomes smaller. • To build a legacy that matters, the driving force must be integrity. • When in doubt about what to do next, do the next right thing.

  5. The Power of Recovery(can’t remember source) Potential Time

  6. Slaying the DragonThe History of Addiction Treatment and Recovery in America THE LAW MUST RECOGNIZE A LEADING FACT, MEDICAL NOT PENAL TREATMENT REFORMS THE DRUNKARD

  7. Recovery Community Treatment Community Historical context...

  8. Recovery Community Treatment Community CCAR, a nationally respected Recovery Community Organization… bridges the gap

  9. Recovery Community Treatment Community Historical context...

  10. Connecticut Community for Addiction Recovery (CCAR) Organizes the Recovery Community to… • tap into the inherent nature to give back • Put a Face on Recovery • Advocacy: have a voice on issues of importance to the recovery community • Offer ourselves as living proof that recovery is a reality in the lives of millions of people • Provide Recovery Support Services • To maintain and sustain recovery Funded by Connecticut DMHAS, foundations, products/services and private donations

  11. Vision and Mission VISION: The Connecticut Community for Addiction Recovery (CCAR) envisions a world where the power, hope and healing of recovery from alcohol and other drug addiction is thoroughly understood and embraced. MISSION: The Connecticut Community for Addiction Recovery (CCAR) organizes the recovery community (people in recovery, family members, friends and allies) to 1) put a face on recovery and 2) provide recovery support services. By promoting recovery from alcohol and other drug addiction through advocacy, education and service, CCAR strives to end discrimination surrounding addiction and recovery, open new doors and remove barriers to recovery, maintain and sustain recovery regardless of the pathway, all the while ensuring that all people in recovery, and people seeking recovery, are treated with dignity and respect.

  12. Foundational Principals “You are in recovery if you say you are.” “There are many pathways to recovery.” “Focus is on the recovery potential, not the pathology.” “Err on the side of the recoveree.” “Err on the side of being generous.”

  13. Some Advocacy Highlights Wrote the Recovery Core Values along with Advocacy Unlimited that became the foundation for the Commissioner’s Policy # 83: Promoting a Recovery-Oriented Service System. Helped turn “Heroin Town”, a negative Hartford Courant newspaper series, into “Recovery Town”. Educated the legislature about the Pardons Process where significant changes have been made. Assisted DMHAS through some NIMBY housing issues associated with Access to Recovery (ATR). Involved in FAVOR issues – restoration of RCSP funding, HBO Addiction documentary, insurance discrimination

  14. Puts a Face on Recovery by • Frequent speaking engagements • Recovery Poster Series • Cable public access TV shows • Positive Faces, Willimantic • Capitol Voices of Recovery, Hartford • Hooked on Recovery, New London • DVDs, Videos • Putting a Face on Recovery • The Healing Power of Recovery • The Legacy of Hope: Recovery Elders Video Project • Website http://ccar.us • Recovery Walks!, Rally for Recovery (Faces & Voices of Recovery)

  15. Recovery Community Centers Field of Dreams “build it and they will come”

  16. Recovery Community Centers • are recovery oriented sanctuaries anchored in the hearts of communities • are physical locations where local communities of recovery can be organized • places where Recovery Support Services are delivered and are designed, tailored and delivered by local recovery communities • are fueled by a comprehensive Volunteer Management System – including people in long-term, sustained recovery

  17. Recovery Community Centers Willimantic, New London, Bridgeport, Hartford

  18. Recovery Support Services All-Recovery Groups Recovery Training Series Family Support Groups Recovery Coaching Recovery Social Events Telephone Recovery Support* Recovery-Oriented Employment Services* Recovery Housing Project*

  19. “We call because we care.” • In the spirit of KISS, a new recoveree would receive a phone call from a trained volunteer (usually another person in recovery) once a week for 12 weeks • Volunteer follows script • CCAR – gives new recoveree a better shot at maintaining their recovery AND helps the Volunteer making the call • Provider – helps their clientele • Results, outcomes, evaluations all outstanding

  20. Telephone Recovery Support • “When asked if I find the TRS (Telephone Recovery Support) calls helpful I can’t say yes enough.  There’s something so supportive about knowing that no matter what happens in my life there’s someone who genuinely cares about how my recovery is going.  My volunteer has shared in every victory I have had in my recovery since the calls began.  I hope to continue receiving these calls for a long time to come.” ~Constance Carpenter, recoveree enrolled in CCAR’s TRS program for the last 55 weeks

  21. Telephone Recovery Support • “Out of all of the commitments I’ve had – TRS is my favorite way of giving back.  Honestly – it’s a toss up as to who gets more out of it…me or them.” ~Caroline Miclette, TRS Volunteer • “When I was using my phone never rang and I wanted it to.  I remember just sitting there, staring at the phone wishing someone would call me, talk to me…possibly help me.  Now I’m in recovery, for me this is the perfect way of giving back… being that phone call that I never got.”~Curtiss Kolodney, TRS Volunteer

  22. Telephone Recovery Support • In 2009, CCAR enrolled 1,420 new recoverees. • Average length of enrollment is 20 weeks. • One recoveree has been enrolled for nearly 4 years. • In 2009, CCAR volunteers placed 36,865 outbound calls. • In 2009, CCAR volunteers talked to a recoveree 10,052 times. • Of 599 recoverees who completed 12 weeks, 514 reported they were still in recovery, or 86%. • Of 216 recoverees who completed 12 weeks AND resided in a Recovery Living Center, 94% reported they were still in recovery.

  23. Recovery Oriented Employment Services (ROES) Recovery/Vocational Training 7 part continuous curriculum Recoverees required to Enroll in Telephone Recovery Support Contribute 20 hours as a CCAR Volunteer Recovery-friendly employer database Provide training to employers to become more recovery-friendly

  24. Recovery Housing Project • Inventory existing recovery housing (independently owned, privately operated “sober houses”) • Database www.findrecoveryhousing.com • Establish the Recovery Housing Coalition of Connecticut • Standards • Advocacy • Monthly meetings • Deliver “So, You Want to Open a Recovery House?” trainings

  25. Volunteer Management System • Modeled after a hospital volunteer system • Screening, interviews, background checks, training, job descriptions, scheduling, supervision, recognition • Comprehensive Volunteer Orientation training • 6 week, 6 month evaluations • Volunteer Recognition dinner in April

  26. Volunteers Staff

  27. Volunteer Management System • In 2005, 90 CCAR Volunteers contributed 3,450 hours • In 2006, 204 CCAR Volunteers contributed 5,328 hours • In 2007, 304 CCAR Volunteers contributed 8,078 hours • In 2008, 276 CCAR Volunteers contributed 13,080 hours • In 2009, 268 CCAR Volunteers contributed 14,697 hoursUsing the Connecticut Volunteer Rate, the monetary value contributed in each year • In 2005: $74,870 • In 2006: $155,612 • In 2007: $175,293 • In 2008: $336,797 • In 2009: $378,448

  28. Contact Information Phillip Valentine Executive Director Connecticut Community for Addiction Recovery (CCAR) 198 Wethersfield Avenue Hartford, CT 06114 (860) 244-2227 Email: phillip@ccar.us Website: http://ccar.us

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