Faces and Voices of Recovery
organizing the recovery community

Trainings and Events

Los Angeles Community Listening Forum on Housing on June 9, 2012
Register Today!

Young Peoples' Recovery Messaging Training in St. Paul, MN on August 11-12, 2012
Register Today!
Click here for the flyer

The Science of Addiction & Recovery Training in Cheyenne, WY on August 11, 2012
Register Today!
Click here for the flyer

Rally for Recovery 2012!
Click here for more information

Recovery Community Centers in New England: Where We Are Now
Click here to find out!

Developing an Accreditation System for Organizations and Programs Providing Peer Recovery Support Services
View or download it here
Download the PowerPoint here

Association of Recovery Community Organizations (ARCO)
Learn more and apply for membership

Faces & Voices Celebrates 10th Anniversary!
Read the remarks of the people that help make it happen

International Resources Guide
Check out the Recovery movement around the globe

The Congressional Addiction, Treatment and Recovery Caucus
Click here to find out if your voice has representation

Faces and Voices Membership

Ways of Giving - click here

Donate Now - click here

Organizational
Membership - click here

Our Donors - click here

Our Organizational
Members - click here


Our Regions

Map of the United States

Get Active

Store

Recovery Resources

Our Stories

Share the power of long-term recovery. If you are in recovery, a family member, friend or ally of someone in recovery, we want to hear your recovery story!
Learn more...

 

Faces & Voices of Recovery's book page

has information on many of the growing number of recovery-related publications. It’s a work in progress, so please let us know of other books that you think we should include. Check it out!
Register to Vote at Rock the Vote

Recovery in the News

Editorial

A Second Chance for Ex-Offenders
New York Times
November 7, 2007

If past patterns hold true, more than half of the 650,000 prisoners released this year will be back behind bars by 2010. With the prison population exploding and the price of incarceration now topping $60 billion a year, states are rightly focusing on ways to reduce recidivism. Congress can give these efforts a boost by passing the Second Chance Act, which would provide crucial help to people who have paid their debts to society.

Newly released inmates are often driven right back to prison by difficulty in obtaining jobs, education and housing, as well as by the social stigma that comes from having been in prison. In addition, many of these people suffer from mental illnesses but have no access to treatment. Some states have begun offering assistance in these areas, but much more needs to be done.

The Second Chance Act would add to what the country knows about the re-entry process by establishing a federal re-entry task force, along with a national resource center to collect and disseminate information about proven programs.

The bill would broaden access to high-quality drug treatment, which is in scarce supply almost everywhere. It would also encourage states to work harder at reuniting families, which are often torn apart when a parent goes to prison.

The country worsened the recidivism crisis when it killed off many of the in-prison education programs that have a strong track record of helping released inmates live crime-free lives. The bill would begin to reverse that destructive trend by providing grants to improve academic and vocational education behind bars.

The programs necessary to help former prisoners find a place in society do not exist in most communities. The Second Chance Act would help to create those programs by providing money, training, technical assistance — and a Congressional stamp of approval.

© Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

back to top