Beefed-up drug, alcohol rehab program set to launch at Salvation Army in 2021


Shaween Sullivan invested much of the previous twenty years homeless, off and on, even while working as a truck chauffeur. Captive to alcohol, he stumbled through numerous marital relationships and backslid out of addiction treatments.

However at age 57, he feels he’s lastly pin down sobriety. He invested the previous 18 months at the Salvation Army’s Harbor Light Center residential rehab center in San Francisco and in December finished a peer therapy course. His hunt for a task assisting homeless people has actually started.

With a bit more help, Sullivan stated, he will be geared up to make that sobriety long-term– not fall back to the bottle like he did previously.

” I have actually been enthusiastically offered a great deal of things, and I ‘d like to do the exact same and return,” Sullivan stated. “I simply require a bit more help, like some transitional real estate while I make my method to complete self-reliance.”

That’s simply what the Salvation Army has in mind for the coming year: a ladder-like program that takes homeless people having a hard time with addiction from the street to completely housed self-reliance in one smooth flight.

The concept is to keep supporting Harbor Light Center individuals like Sullivan for 2 to 3 years so the rehab, task training and therapy can really stick. No changing to other programs or discharge after getting tidy for a couple of months– that’s when addicts frequently relapse.

Shaween Sullivan stacks food boxes ready to be distributed at the Salvation Army's Harbor Light Center in San Francisco, Calif. on Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2020.
Shaween Sullivan stacks food boxes all set to be dispersed at the Salvation Army’s Harbor Light Center in San Francisco, Calif. on Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2020. Paul Chinn/ The Chronicle

The brand-new plan will cover the $700 regular monthly charge individuals generally have to pay for being in the residential program, so when the customers leave they will have whatever earnings they might have conserved to use for their post-rehab life. That implies things like rental deposit or transport to a brand-new task.

Secret to all of this is having enough transitional real estate readily available for individuals as the program broadens, stated Theo Ellington, director of homeless efforts for the Salvation Army in San Francisco. With that in mind, the not-for-profit is preparing to develop hundreds of budget-friendly and transitional real estate systems over the next ten years on some of its 6 big residential or commercial properties in the city.

” We desire to prevent that ‘cleaning maker effect,’ where folks enter into a 3- to six-month treatment program, are off-boarded without an assistance system and then fall back into addiction,” Ellington stated. “We truly desire to have our arms twisted around people, to develop a real estate ladder for them.”

He stated a 2012 Salvation Army national research study revealed that homeless addicts who stayed in treatment with continuous assistance for 2 to 3 years had a 90% possibility of not backsliding when they leave rehab. That compares with the normal national relapse rate, which is as high as 60%, according to the National Institute on Substance Abuse.

The pilot is part of the Salvation Army’s five-year “The Escape” effort, started in 2015, in which the company plans to drastically increase its homelessness services in the western United States. The Salvation Army has actually run in San Francisco because 1883, and is the biggest not-for-profit landowner in the city.

It has actually raised about $1 million of the $4.5 million it hopes to collect over the next year for regional Escape objectives, Ellington stated.



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