Thursday, December 13, 2012

Time to Talk: Get Help Talking to Your Kids about Drugs and Alcohol

Time to Talk: Get Help Talking to Your Kids about Drugs and Alcohol
The Partnership at Drugfree.org
Hi Joseph,

The holiday season is upon us! Before we gather for food and good tidings with family and friends, we at The Partnership wanted to wish you and your family a happy holiday season. Here's our card to you:

Give hope. Change lives. Make a difference.


We hope you'll take a minute of your time to give to The Partnership so our vision and "wish" that all young people will be able to live their lives free of drug and alcohol dependency can come true:

http://my.drugfree.org/help-make-a-difference

Happy holidays,

Steve J. Pasierb
President & CEO
The Partnership at Drugfree.org

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Council Masthead
  
 CERTIFIED RECOVERY SPECIALIST (CRS) TRAINING (54 PCB Credits) 

SATURDAY PROGRAM
Starts Saturday, January 12, 2013
Ends Saturday, May 11, 2013

Location:
Southern Bucks Recovery Community Center
1286 Veterans Highway, D-6, Bristol, PA 19007, 215-788-1718
Pre-registration is required 
REGISTER ONLINE BY CLICKING HERE

Registration Help Desk: 215-489-6120, ext 1
Class size is limited
        This condensed bi-weekly Saturday program provides the 54 hours of educational training required for the Pennsylvania Certification Board Certified Recovery Specialist (CRS) credential. The CRS provides community-based support to individuals through their life skills and recovery experiences while serving as a role model, advocate and motivator to recovering individuals.  
This Saturday Training Meets twice a month and includes Five Modules 
 
        Recovery Management -- 18 hours
        Education and Advocacy -- 12 hours
        Professional Ethics and Responsibility -- 12 hours
        Confidentiality -- 6 hours
        Additional Addiction Training -- 6 hours

        In addition, a three-hour segment on Saturday, May 11th, will be provided for preparation for the CRS exam.

Please visit The Council Web site to review the complete course curriculum.   
 Daily Program Agenda:
 9:00 am to 4:30 pm; training sessions are held twice each month 
There is a one-hour break for lunch

Instructors: 
Staff members of The Council of Southeast Pennsylvania with a history of more than
14 years of providing recovery support services.

Program Cost: $540
54 hours may be applied toward the PCB CRS credential 
PCB CRS Exam Fee: $100.00
REGISTER ONLINE BY CLICKING HERE  
Program Sponsorship and Accreditation:
The Council of Southeast Pennsylvania, Inc., is a PCB-approved provider and affiliate of the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, serving the southeast region of Pennsylvania. PCB Education Provider #031.

Philadelphia Recovery Community Center organizing street cleaning on Jan. 21, 2013





VOLUNTEERSSOUGHT FOR MLK DAY OF SERVICE


PHILADELPHIA, Pa. —Dec. 12, 2012 — The Philadelphia Recovery Community Center (PRCC) seeks volunteers to help clean the streets of North Philadelphia on MLK Day, Jan. 21, 2013, a national day of service commemorating the life of the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

The cleanup is a community service project of PRO-ACT’s Amends in Action committee.

“For individuals in recovery, a day of service is an opportunity to make living amends by giving back to the community,” said Cheryl Poccia, volunteer coordinator for PRCC. “Our street-cleaning project is becoming an annual tradition here at the center, and we welcome community members to join us.”

Volunteer cleanup crews are deployed from the center, which is located at 1701 W. Lehigh Ave., Unit 6, in North Philadelphia. Last year’s cleanup efforts began at 8 a.m. and ran until 1 p.m.

The center also seeks donations of brooms, shovels, rakes, trash bags and gloves, as well as food items for the volunteers.

Interested volunteers should contact Stacie Leap, chair of PRO-ACT’s Amends in Action committee, at 215-385-3131 or email Stacie.leap@icloud.com.

About Philadelphia Recovery Community Center
Established in 2007, PRCC is a collaboration between Pennsylvania Recovery Organization-Achieving Community Together (PRO-ACT) and the City of Philadelphia Department of Behavioral Health and Intellectual DisAbility Services. Programs and services include peer-to-peer recovery coaching, life skills workshops, housing and credit information sessions, health and nutrition programs, discussion groups, drug- and alcohol-free social activities and more.  

About PRO-ACT
PRO-ACT is the regional nonprofit organization working to mobilize and rally individuals in recovery from addiction, as well as their families, friends and allies in a campaign to end discrimination, broaden social understanding and achieve a just response to addiction as a public health crisis. PRO-ACT is hosted by The Council of Southeast Pennsylvania.

About The Council of Southeast Pennsylvania, Inc.
The Council of Southeast Pennsylvania, Inc. is a private nonprofit prevention, education, advocacy, and intervention organization, providing a wide range of services to families, schools, businesses, individuals, and the community. Founded in 1975, The Council serves the Southeast region of Pennsylvania and is a member of a nationwide network of National Council on Alcoholism and DrugDependence Affiliates. The Council has offices and Recovery Community Centers in Doylestown, New Britain, Bristol, and Philadelphia. For help with alcohol, tobacco or other substances, or for information on the disease of alcoholism and addiction, call 800-221-6333, toll-free, 24-hours a day. For more information, visit www.councilsepa.org.

Merry Christmas Lighthouse Network
Thanks to your financial support and prayer, Lighthouse Network was able to play a part in daily life-saving miracles like these:
  • Jennifer, new guardian for her 18 y.o niece who aged out of social service care, was overwhelmed with and couldn't handle her nieces acting out and destructive behavior, giving her 3 days to get out. In desperation, Jennifer searched the Internet and found the Lighthouse Network Addiction & Counseling Helpline number. We provided encouragement, hope, and answers which allowed her niece to stay a couple weeks then get into a longer term residential situation which her niece liked, Jennifer felt would meet her nieces many needs, and provided therapy and care for her nieces many traumatic past experiences in.
  • John calls our Lighthouse Network Helpline and we find and facilitate admission to a Christian residential rehab facility to finally halt his drinking and save his marriage and job. He is now a growing husband and father, reliable employee, started seminary classes, and wants to leave his white-collar job and go into ministry.
  • Alicia walked into school and quietly started cleaning out her locker. She didn't want her mom do it while overwhelmed after Alicia carried out her plan to commit suicide later that night. But while still in school, Alicia went to a school assembly and saw our unique documentary on behavioral health struggles many teens wrestle with daily, Shattered Silence. With new hope, Alicia went to a guidance counselor and is still living, encouraged, and getting treatment for her struggles.
  • Martha and Henry from California, parents of a 30 y.o. drug addict, heard our new nationally syndicated You’re Not Alone radio program and realized help was available. After calling our helpline, our Care Guide offered options for their son, while Martha and Henry are now using our new Parent Coaching Service to help them heal and equip them to make healthy decisions to interact with their son in a better way after his treatment is over and he returns home.
  • Exceptional and Uplifting! …. AWESOME and very timely. … ministered to my heart …. powerful yet simplified ... thought provoking … I needed this today … It made me cry, the joyful, not the sad kind … God’s truths, but you apply them to help us grow

Reflecting our tagline, Guidance through life’s storms, Lighthouse Network’s daily activity and mission is to help people whether they are experiencing acute storms, stuck in subacute choppy waters, or enjoying calm waters but are preparing for the inevitable next storm.
Highlights of 2012
  • 1. Our free national LN Addiction and Counseling Helpline served 6500 callers, a 25% increase from 2011.
  • 2. Our average month, we directly get 55 into residential rehab or inpatient care, and 40 into outpatient treatment.
  • 3. New professional website with free resources, videos, and helpful tips. Our web traffic is 3 times last year.
  • 4. Creation of a one-minute addiction focused radio program heard several times per day on 242 Christian radio stations around the country. Listen to a couple at http://lighthousenetwork.org/ln-radio-short-features/
  • 5. Developed the first Christian Addiction Rehab in the U.S. that will take HMO Insurances.
  • 6. In Gulu, Uganda, our team of 7 equipped and ministered to 483 children and their 50 mentors, victimized by Joseph Kony.
  • 7. Developed several new topical DVD resources for counselors, treatment agencies, and ministries, to use in various ways.
  • 8. Have 3 new books, 2 of them LN staff member’s transformation stories (see online: http://lighthousenetwork.org/books/ )
  • 9. Guest expert on many radio and TV programs bringing Biblical wisdom into social policy hot topics and problem issues.
  • 10. Now have many resources for parents of addicts, including a coach to give telephonic weekly coaching to heal and equip.
  • 11. Development of Shattered Silence, a documentary facilitating discussion about difficult issues teens face. Shown on GodTV to millions of homes and already and receiving life-impacting reviews.
  • 12. Rewind Life, a streamlined online and computerized version of our decision-making curriculum geared to teens won a $10,000 grant to automate the resource which will allow more opportunities for it’s use.
  • 13. Developed Weekly e-Newsletter to equip and inform our growing follower.  15% Budget growth in a depressed economy and difficult healthcare climate. Revenues from services, grants, and donors!
Major Goals for 2013 (as well as maintaining our usual activities) -
  • Help 7250 callers get answers to their desperate situations and pain.
  • Monthly, help 70 people get to inpatient/residential treatment and 50 to outpatient services.
  • Grow the radio program to over 300 stations per day and cover more issues like eating disorders, trauma, and suicide.
  • Develop 2 more Christian residential addiction programs, one that will accept Medicare and one for adolescents.
  • Speak and exhibit at 2 national Christian conferences.
  • Continue to grow social media outreach to inform and increase Helpline awareness.
  • Develop a monthly Christian Addiction Newsletter to educate, equip, and revolutionize addiction treatment.
  • Growth in our volunteers and staff.
You have been faithful and generous in the past and many struggling people need your support. These psychological struggles are great windows when people are looking for hope, answers, and truth, and we have the expertise to deliver that through the support and treatment options we offer them. See the opportunities and projects below and information on how to donate.
 
Specific Opportunities and Areas for your support (numbers are dollars):
 
1.     Addiction & Counseling Treatment Helpline "877' toll free helpline number: 75/month = $900/yr
 
2.     Email service for our Stepping Stones Daily Devotional: 90/month = $1080/yr
 
3.     Editing our one minute radio program: 100/each day, would like to develop 100 new ones in 2013 = $10,000
 
4.     Helping one person on our helpline: 60/call = $1070/day
 
5.     Weekly e-News: $100/week
 
6.     Monthly addiction newsletter: $350/month
 
7.     Exhibitor expenses for national conference: $7,500
 
8.     Grow Care Guide Staff for increased calls and Community Outreach: $36,000/yr.
 
9.     Publishing a Stepping Stones Devotional Book: $15,000
 
10.  Shattered Silence DVD Duplication – 1,000 copies: $1,500
 
11.  Year End Fundraising Goal = $20,000
 
 
Ways to Donate:
To donate you have 3 options:
  1. Send a check
    Made out to: Lighthouse Network
    Send to: 800 W. State Street, Suite 302, Doylestown, PA 18901
     
  2. Please click here and follow the prompts if you are getting this via email.
     
  3. Go to our website www.Lighthousenetwork.org and click the “DONATE” button on the top menu bar.
We also have beautiful Addiction and Mental Health Awareness Bracelets that make a great Christmas gift:   http://lighthousenetwork.org/store/jewelry/

Thank you for your continued support and prayers, we wish you all the best during this great CHRISTmas season, and may you have a blessed 2013.  
 
by HIS grace,

Karl Benzio, MD, and the rest of our Lighthouse Network family.
Our mailing address is:
Lighthouse Network
800 West State St
Suite 302
Doylestown, PA 18901

Add us to your address book

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Three More States to Consider Requiring Welfare Recipients to Undergo Drug Tests





By Join Together Staff | December 10, 2012 | Leave a comment | Filed in Community Related, Drugs & Legislation

Lawmakers in Ohio, Virginia and Kansas say they will introduce legislation that would require welfare recipients to undergo drug tests before receiving benefits, according to MSNBC.

In Ohio, the proposed law would establish drug-testing programs in three counties. If applicants disclosed they had used illegal drugs, they would have to submit to a drug test. The bill would allocate an additional $100,000 for drug treatment programs.

In Virginia, a drug-testing law that previously was rejected has been revived. The earlier version failed after the state concluded it would cost $1.5 million to implement, but would save only $229,000.

Kansas State Senate Vice President Jeff King, who introduced a drug-testing bill in his state, said it is not intended to punish welfare recipients. “If folks test positive, we need to help them get help and help them get the job skills they need to kick the habit to get a job and keep a job,” he said.

Last month, Texas Governor Rick Perry called for drug tests for residents seeking welfare or unemployment benefits. Perry and Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst want to expand a bill that will come before the state legislature next year that would mandate drug testing for “high-risk” welfare applicants, and would ban them from using public funds to purchase alcohol, tobacco or lottery tickets. Perry and Dewhurst want the rules to also include those applying for unemployment benefits.

A Florida law that required welfare applicants to undergo drug testing was halted last year after the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida sued the state to stop it. About 2.5 percent of the 4,000 adults tested before the program was stopped tested positive for drugs. Almost 2,500 people refused to take the drug test.