Politics & Government

County Celebrates Recovery Programs Targeting Substance Abuse, Mental Illness

The organizers will try to tally up the number of years people have been sober and clean and try to reach 1,000 years.

The San Mateo County Board of Supervisors officially declared September Recovery Month in recognition of the many treatment programs available to county residents who are struggling with issues such as drug or alcohol abuse, mental illness and unemployment.       

The theme of this year's Recovery Happens celebration, which
coincides with National Recovery Month, was "Join the Voices for Recovery: Recovery Benefits Everyone."

View photos .

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Dozens of participants gathered in the Board of Supervisors' chambers and outside the county buildings this morning wearing "Recovery
Happens" T-shirts and carrying signs that read "Hope Not Dope" and "Courage to Change the Things I Can."

Ivette Torres, associate director of consumer affairs for the U.S. Center for Substance Abuse Treatment in Washington, D.C., said that one of
the goals of today's events -- which include a rally, walk and picnic in -- is to increase visibility, educational opportunities and acceptance of recovering addicts in the community.

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"Recovery doesn't just benefit the individual," Torres said. "It benefits families, it benefits the community, it benefits everyone."

A former addict named Sue, who said she was a drug addict living in some bushes in East Palo Alto for more than 20 years, credited the
county's Women's Recovery Association, Voices of Recovery and other programs with helping her confront her addictions and leave a life of homelessness.

"Because of Voices of Recovery, today I have a life," Sue said.

Stephen Kaplan, director of the Health System's Alcohol and Other
Drug Services division, said that more than 2,700 San Mateo County residents are treated annually in substance abuse programs supported by the county.

Superior Court Judge Richard Livermore praised the county's Drug
Court program, which gives individuals facing criminal charges for drug use and possession the chance to avoid jail time by entering treatment programs.

Defendants who successfully comply with Drug Court's rigid requirements of drug testing, substance abuse counseling and recovery program participation become "graduates," and their criminal charges can be dismissed or reduced.

The Drug Court programs seek to bring recovery to the forefront of addressing drug and alcohol-related cases in the criminal justice system, Livermore said.

"I've spent 16 years as a Drug Court judge," Livermore said. "I
always tell people 'You're lucky you got busted in San Mateo County.'"

--Bay City News


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