The Connecticut Community for Addiction Recovery (CCAR) envisions a world where the power, hope and healing of recovery from alcohol and other drug addiction is thoroughly understood and embraced.
The Connecticut Community for Addiction Recovery (CCAR) organizes the recovery community (people in recovery, family members, friends and allies) to: 1) Put a face on recovery and, 2) Provide recovery support services.
By promoting recovery from alcohol and other drug addiction through advocacy, education and service, CCAR strives to end discrimination surrounding addiction and recovery, open new doors and remove barriers to recovery, maintain and sustain recovery regardless of the pathway, all the while ensuring that all people in recovery, and people seeking recovery, are treated with dignity and respect.
What does CCAR do - and why do these things matter?
Recovered alcoholics and addicts hold jobs, pay taxes, raise families and contribute. A pro-recovery agenda has significant long-term advantages for Connecticut. It increases the state's economic productivity; reduces stress on families; saves untold millions of dollars in addiction-related healthcare costs; and substantially reduces such social ills as theft, abuse, crimes of violence, and drunk driving.
Tens of thousands of Connecticut residents are already in recovery and back at work. Thousands more are ready to recover but still need basic help, such as a bed in a treatment facility.
Connecticut's ongoing budget crisis continues to be a major obstacle. Legislators find recovery programs an easy target for cuts. The thinking is, "You did this to yourself. And we don't want to pay for it anymore." The powerful stigma attached to alcohol and drug addiction continues to bend policy across America, gambling far more money on punishment and prisons than on recovery.
Even so, progress is happening. Every year CCAR provides expert testimony for state lawmakers, in an effort to retain state-funded treatment programs. Working closely with the state's Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, CCAR is ever-so-slowly changing Connecticut's system of care to one that is recovery oriented.