Pubdate: Tue, 04 Jun 2002
Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Copyright: 2002 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Contact:  http://www.csmonitor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/83
Author: Alexandra Marks

JOBS ELUDE FORMER DRUG ADDICTS

Advocacy groups say companies too often refuse to hire those who have 
turned their lives around, though relapses can be a problem.

NEW YORK - Throughout the job interview, Georgia Evans waited anxiously for 
the question to be asked: Have you ever had a drug or alcohol problem? When 
it wasn't, she didn't volunteer the information.

It was a tough call. Honesty is at the heart of her recovery from a 
13-month crack addiction. But so is having a job.

She saw the omission as her only pragmatic alternative in a culture that 
can harbor deep suspicions of recovering addicts at the same time it touts 
the importance of overcoming drug and alcohol addictions.

Ms. Evans had three previous interviews for jobs for which she was more 
than qualified. In those, she'd been upfront about what she calls her "dumb 
mistake," as well as the hard-won recovery she's both proud of and 
profoundly grateful for. She was turned down for them all.

"A lot of people fear people in treatment.... They think we're all thieves 
or something," she says. "If anything, it's taught me ... that whatever you 
do, you try to do your best."

As treatment rather than prison slowly gains momentum as a way to deal with 
the seemingly intransigent drug problem, it's also fueling a national 
movement dedicated to fighting the kind of discrimination millions of 
people like Evans face every day.

Experts in treatment and recovery estimate that when a recovering addict is 
honest, he or she will get turned down for a job 75 percent of the time - 
even though the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) outlaws 
discrimination against people in recovery. And if the person also has a 
drug conviction - which is common - he or she is also banned from receiving 
government-education loans and grants, low-cost housing, and welfare.

Such policies were instituted to discourage drug use, but advocates of more 
liberal treatment of former addicts say they potentially will undermine the 
nation's effort to grapple with its drug problem.

"Hope for the future is what keeps people in recovery, and blatant and 
systematic discrimination destroys that hope," says former CNN anchor Susan 
Rook, a recovering addict who's now a treatment advocate. "Recovery is 
scary, painful, frustrating, and then, after doing that ... we are punished 
for the best thing that we've ever done, then how in the world can you make 
an argument to the next person you're trying to convince to give recovery a 
try?"

Although the ADA outlaws discrimination against recovering addicts, the 
courts have given that wide interpretation. For instance, in 1997, an 
appeals court found that alcoholics were not covered unless they sustained 
some permanent, debilitating condition. But in 2000, in a case that 
challenged a zoning ban on methadone clinics, a court held that the ADA did 
cover the recovering addicts using the clinics. The ban was overturned.

But advocacy groups say that even with the ADA protection, discrimination 
remains widespread, primarily because few recovering addicts want to fight 
it. Most are simply concerned with getting on with their lives.

And many, like Ms. Rook, also recognize that it's a difficult issue for 
employers. After she had been clean and sober for 2-1/2 years, she had a 
chance at a high-level job representing a corporation. Her last hurdle was 
the interview with the chief executive officer. When she asked if he had 
any questions about her recovery, she says his "jaw dropped," and he wanted 
to know recovery from what. After she told him, the job offer was 
withdrawn. At the time, she was devastated. But she got over it, and the 
experience has propelled her into advocacy work.

Yet she also says that as long as negative stereotypes remain attached to 
people in recovery, she understands the CEO's response. That's why she's on 
the front lines, fighting those stereotypes.

But for employers who are concerned about good workers and stability on the 
job, the issue is more complicated.

A recent survey of people in recovery found that 46 percent had relapsed, 
and of those, 30 percent had stumbled more than once. Treatment advocates 
note, however, that relapse is part of the healing process. And the longer 
people are in recovery, the less likely they are to go back to old 
destructive habits.

A New York employer, who owns a variety of businesses, agrees that the 
negative stigma attached to the word "addiction" has an impact on 
employers' attitudes. That's primarily because the goal is to hire the best 
person, and "when you throw in something so negative," that potentially can 
override other factors.

"If one does hire someone like this, it becomes a personal matter, and one 
has to take more effort watching and supervising that person. It is 
possible to do," says employer, who preferred not to be named. "But if one 
has a choice between [a person who's] been addicted and one who's not, one 
would go for the person who's not addicted."

But treatment advocates counter that what employers and the country as 
whole need is a better understanding of the recovery process.

"When people who aren't familiar with the process see the drug addict have 
a relapse, they think: 'They're just drug addicts, they're one and the 
same, they go back to their drugs,' " says Peter Provet, president of 
Odyssey House, a drug-treatment facility in New York. "That perpetuates 
that negative stereotype that is dominating the public."

Dr. Provet says the public needs to understand - just like every addict - 
that while relapse is a real possibility, if someone gets back in the 
saddle right away, chances are they'll stay in recovery like millions of 
Americans who are quietly getting on with their lives.

"You will never see a front page headline that reads: 'Woman in successful 
recovery for six years mows lawn over the weekend,' " says Rook. "But 
that's what millions of us do, and as a country we have a choice: Do we 
want to support that, or build more prisons?"
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MAP posted-by: Alex