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Posts Tagged ‘Jobs’

Question - Are there any studies on the hiring of Addicts in early Recovery?

I wish I knew of one!  If anyone has done one or knows where to find one it would be really helpful…Below are some of my opinions and experiences on the subject…

My opinion and experience is that employment performance follows the recovery process.  In the first year of recovery relapse is common, the brain is going through significant changes (healing) and lifestyle, family and work issues are difficult to address.

A common solution in the “nonprofit” treatment centers is called “Agency Jobs”.  Providing employment as part of the treatment center recovery program.  The longest running programs of this kind are the Salvation Army and Delancy Street.

Outside of the treatment center, the 12 Step community encourages the “Get Well” job.  A job that “supports” recovery.  Characteristics of a get well job is low stress, flexible hours and recovery friendly work environment.  We see some successful “entrepreneurs in recovery” providing get well jobs to people in early recovery.  The typical Sponsor direction is “get any job” it doesn’t matter just keep busy.

At the 12 Angels we have done research in looking for jobs that could provide revenue to the treatment center, job skills in growth industries and can be located at the treatment center.  We have a number of business models for “Agency Jobs”.

We have created small pilot programs using micro credit and micro loan programs to stimulate hiring of the newly clean and sober.  This is an area of great promise that needs some more work and development!

A Sober Restauranteur — Over 400 Helped And Counting

Although he is only 31 years old, the restaurateur and chef Eric Ernest has been sober and working a program for over a decade as an entrepreneur in recovery. At 17, he was an alcoholic “garbage can” who would do any drug he could get his hands on. Still a minor, he had an extensive criminal history that included drug dealings, guns and assault & battery. Once he got sober, his shattered past and tainted record led nowhere. He could not get accepted to college and was turned down by the military. Eric reflects, “I basically had no options, and I thought about being a sober criminal.”

In his rehab, Eric started working in the kitchen and moved right into cooking. Using this experience on a resume, he obtained a dishwashing job at a restaurant. From the lowliest point in the hierarchy, he built himself up and several years later was opening up his first establishment. Eric loved working in a restaurant in early sobriety because it got him out of his head. The long, action-oriented hours, the multi-tasking atmosphere, and the constant demand for focus were beneficial to his early sobriety. As he said, “I was forced to put the principles into practice in order to succeed.” When he became a cook, the meditative part of cooking enhanced his spiritual serenity.

Since opening his first place at 24, Eric has started six restaurants as either an owner or a profit sharing partner with multi-unit, multi-concept restaurant groups. Since the industry is network-based and tightly woven, Eric estimates he has gotten jobs for 400 alcoholics and addicts in recovery, and a vast majority of those in early sobriety. Although the number stunned this blogger, I was convinced when Eric received two phone calls while I interviewed him at Starbucks. The first was from a sponsor looking for a job for his sponsee, and the second was from a friend who was opening a new restaurant and looking for workers. Laughing, Eric mentioned that he receives such calls virtually every day of the week.

I asked him why he would put his reputation on the line by recommending those in early sobriety for jobs to his business associates. He related two key points to me: 1) The restaurant business is based on word-of-mouth, and you tend to go with what you know. When people he respects in the program recommend a person in early sobriety, he sides with his faith in them. 2) A direct attempt at making an impact by offering to others in the program what was freely given to him. The restaurant business provides a fast track to life because a worker must multi-task, be willing and have people skills. The only challenge with workers in early sobriety has been the mental aspect. When they cannot shut their heads off, the alcoholic conditions makes it much harder to be a worker among workers and keep focused for long periods of time. Nevertheless, Eric estimates that 90% of the people he recommended in early sobriety have kept their jobs for at least a year. Overall, the track record created by workers in early sobriety is so impressive, it has allowed Eric to return to the productive well over and over again.

Eric Ernest will be speaking at a future Entrepreneurs In Recovery meeting. He currently has several restaurant projects in the works, and he is seeking funding. He notes that in a difficult economy, mid-level restaurants tend to thrive. Why? Because the clientele of the high-level restaurants trickle down and spend more money at the mid-levels than their typical customers. Since they no longer go to Spago, they now show up at the Cheesecake Factory. If anyone is interested in learning about Eric’s projects, he can be contacted at foie_gras@hotmail.com.