Faces and Voices of Recovery
organizing the recovery community

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Read "Rescued Lives:The Oxford House Approach to Substance Abuse" and join the discussion!

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Get the tools and resources you need to work on recovery advocacy campaigns

September 20
Over 40,000 people in recovery, family members, friends and allies came together...

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11.15.08

More women in this country die of substance abuse-related illnesses each year than of breast cancer. Think about that for a minute. It is, no doubt, one of the most arresting...

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The Recovery Bill of Rights

is a statement of the principle that all Americans have a right to recover from addiction to alcohol and other drugs. Learn more…

 

Rally for Recovery! 2008

Start planning your 2008 Rally for Recovery! event. This year's Rally for Recovery will take place on September 20, 2008! Learn more...

 

Campaigns: Recovery Voices Count

Recovery Voices Count

Register to Vote at Rock the VoteGrowing numbers of recovery community organizations and recovery advocates across the country are getting involved in nonpartisan voting activities so that their voices can be heard in the local, state and national arenas. They are conducting voter registration and Get-Out-the-Vote activities, sponsoring candidate forums and getting candidates for political office on record about critical policies that will make recovery a reality for even more Americans.

Recovery Voices Count is one part of our national movement to make it possible for even more of our friends, neighbors and family members to experience long-term recovery from addiction by building recognition of the recovery community as a constituency of consequence. As recovery community organizations and recovery advocates register voters, educate candidates for public office about key issues and turn out voters in growing numbers, we will have an even greater impact on the lives of people who still need help with their addiction, people in long-term recovery, their family members and communities.

With less than half of eligible Americans voting, Recovery Voices Count is a great way to help people take the first step in civic participation and build your recovery community organization. Every individual eligible to vote needs to be encouraged to register to vote and, if already registered, encouraged to vote.

One policy issue that is very important to the recovery community is restoring the right of people with criminal convictions to vote. More than five million Americans are barred from the polls because of these restrictions. Many of these disenfranchised people have experience with addiction and face lifetime bans on participating in our civic life as voters. Recovery community organizations around the country are working in coalition with allied organizations to right this wrong. To find out more about this issue and how you can get involved in these efforts, take a look at our Webinar on Restoring Voting Rights to People with Drug Convictions.

Join us in reaching out and organizing the recovery community to participate in our electoral process. To assist in your Recovery Community Civic Engagement Campaign, Faces & Voices has buttons that say “We Recover and We Vote,“I’m in Recovery and I Vote” and a bumper sticker that says “Another Voter for Recovery!”

Join us in making Recovery Voices Count!

 

Recovery Voices Count is made possible with the support of an unrestricted grant from Reckitt Benckiser and the members of Faces & Voices of Recovery.

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