by LaMara HunterKelly | Jan 22, 2016 | In The News

Sunday, January 24, 2016
(Published in print: Monday, January 25, 2016)
Mr. Michael Lewis is no stranger to the RECOVER Project. Born and raised in Western Mass, Michael’s early adult life took him across the country, serving as a Marine, owning a business and various other jobs including being a baker and truck driver. He eventually returned to this area where he attended Greenfield Community College and earned his social work degree from Elms College. While enrolled at Elms, Michael worked for GCC, interned and then worked under a short-term funded grant for the RECOVER Project…
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by LaMara HunterKelly | Jan 11, 2016 | In The News

By CHRIS CURTIS
Recorder Staff
Thursday, January 7, 2016
(Published in print: Friday, January 8, 2016)
GREENFIELD — Looking back on seven years with the Greenfield peer-to-peer addiction recovery community and 33 years in recovery, Linda Sarage sees changes in herself, in the community and in what might be termed the philosophy of addiction.
Sarage is retiring this month after serving as executive director of the RECOVER Project for seven years. She took the job after an early retirement from the Greenfield Public Schools to take care of her dying mother, and when she was offered the job by a friend who knew she was in recovery. Sarage said she had kept her addiction and recovery private, and knew that would end if she took the post. …
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by LaMara HunterKelly | Dec 16, 2015 | In The News

GIVING BACK IN GREENFIELD!
By CHRIS CURTIS Recorder Staff
Monday, December 7, 2015
(Published in print: Tuesday, December 8, 2015)
GREENFIELD — Toys gathering dust could bring a smile to someone again, and a local group hopes they will.
The local addiction recovery group is hosting its second annual Giving Back in Greenfield toy drive, collecting new and gently used toys and books for families in need.
“I personally can remember waking up Christmas morning and for me in my house, we believed in Santa, and I woke up and my dreams were crushed because Santa didn’t come,” said organizer Heather Taylor. “No child deserves to be left behind, every child deserves to have a Christmas, have a holiday.”
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by LaMara HunterKelly | Oct 6, 2015 | In The News

By CHRIS CURTIS
Recorder Staff
Sunday, October 4, 2015
(Published in print: Monday, October 5, 2015)
“The crowd, it’s just this enthusiastic happy crowd that’s just done with being silent, they’re done with being silent about addiction … oh, the surgeon general’s on stage right now,” Linda Sarage said, from the National Mall in Washington D.C. on Sunday evening.
Sarage, director of the RECOVER Project peer-to-peer addiction recovery center in Greenfield, traveled with a group of 40 from the Greenfield community and Holyoke to join the Unite To Face Addiction rally.
Listing performers and speakers from the Goo Goo Dolls’ John Rzeznik to White House Office of National Drug Control Policy Director Michael Botticelli, and President Barack Obama by video, Sarage called the rally “historic.”
“Bill White, who is the grandfather of the recovery movement, in 1998 he wrote a piece, ‘Someday, someday we’re going to see leaders of our nation speak about drug use,’ and this is the day, today is the day, Oct. 4,” Sarage said. As national voices took the stage, attendees described a tone far removed from the rhetoric of the war on drugs.
“It’s really a historical day for addiction and recovery. No longer will we treat addiction as a criminal activity or a moral failing,” Sarage said. “I’m sorry, I’m caught up in the energy.”
Greenfield native and Amherst resident Sarah Ahern put the number of attendees at about 10,000 — not the 50,000 hoped for, but not a small crowd. Ahern said she volunteered all day setting up the event, and was headed back to the metro station an hour into the 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. rally.
“I wanted to be part of the national voice that says, ‘This is the day the silence ends, no more shame, no more stigma,’” Ahern said. She has begun an effort to bring the Gloucester Police Department’s widely-publicized Angel Initiative — an open-door policy and a promise to help drug users into treatment — to Franklin County.
“My family, we have four people in recovery, I’ve lost two cousins to the disease and I couldn’t stay silent anymore,” Ahern said.
You can reach Chris Curtis at: ccurtis@recorder.com or 413-772-0261, ext. 257
by LaMara HunterKelly | Apr 1, 2015 | In The News
Here is a great article from the Recorder by writer Kathleen McKiernan about the work we do at The Recover Project.
GREENFIELD — In the first half of 2014, some 7 percent of patients at The Birthplace at Baystate Franklin Medical Center were affected by substance abuse during their pregnancies — a 2 percent increase from 2013, according to Assistant Nurse Manager Linda Jablonski.
In 2013, of the 460 babies delivered on the maternity ward, 22 required close observation for possible drug exposure in the womb and seven needed treatment in the form of morphine to ease withdrawal, according to Jablonski.
Substance abuse is a problem affecting many in Franklin County — including its new mothers. Continue Reading Article at The Recorder