Faces & Voices of Recovery

Faces & Voices of Recovery Faces & Voices is committed to organizing and mobilizing the millions of Americans in Recovery. Paul, Minnesota. The St. Paul Summit had three goals:

1).

For too long those most affected by alcohol and other drug problems have been absent from the public policy debate. Faces & Voices of Recovery was founded in 2001 at a Summit in St. In the 1990s, advocates and their national allies met to strategize on ways to reach out to the medical, public health, criminal justice and other communities about the possibilities of recovery from addiction to alcoh

ol and other drugs, forming The Alliance Project. The project and its supporters found inspiration and support in the writings of historian William White and in the airing of a groundbreaking television series on addiction produced by Bill Moyers. The Alliance Project began planning for a national gathering; among their key tasks was the commissioning of the first national survey of the recovery community, The Face of Recovery. Paul Summit was the culmination of from more than two years of work to provide focus for a growing advocacy force among individuals in long-term recovery from addiction, their families, friends and allies. To celebrate and honor recovery in all its diversity

2). To foster advocacy skills in the tradition of American advocacy movements

3). To produce principles, language, strategy and leadership to carry the movement forward

The nearly 200 participants were selected to represent the national recovery community – by geography, culture, recovery path, gender, etc. Speakers included the late Senator Paul Wellstone and Representative Jim Ramstad (R-MN). The Summit is best seen as a point along a curve of events charting the awakening, maturing and mobilizing of an American recovery advocacy movement. Faces & Voices of Recovery Summit 2001 Proceedings

At its 2001 National Summit, Faces & Voices of Recovery adopted a Core Positioning Statement, laying out the principles for a national campaign and elected a 22-member Campaign Advisory Committee to provide leadership to the campaign. Throughout the U.S., recovery advocates were hard at work on local and statewide campaigns. In 2003, Faces & Voices of Recovery elected a 13-member Campaign Steering Committee to streamline and revitalize its work and make it more responsive to the recovery community. In 2004, Faces & Voices of Recovery was incorporated and received IRS designation as a 501 (c)(3) nonprofit corporation. In 2005, a 21-member Board of Directors was elected to advise and direct the campaign.

More people are telling the truth about their own experience.New survey findings show the number of Americans who identi...
06/06/2026

More people are telling the truth about their own experience.

New survey findings show the number of Americans who identify themselves as the source of addiction’s personal impact rose from 8% to 26%.

That shift matters. It reflects a growing willingness to speak openly about substance use, recovery, and the realities so many people have carried in silence for far too long.

This kind of change does not happen by accident. It is the direct result of advocacy, education, storytelling, and people with lived experience refusing to hide who they are.
Every honest conversation helps break stigma and makes recovery more visible for the next person.

America is ready for recovery.

Learn more: bit.ly/RecoveryReady26

The impact reaches across generations.New survey findings show the number of Americans who say addiction has impacted th...
06/05/2026

The impact reaches across generations.

New survey findings show the number of Americans who say addiction has impacted their lives through their children rose from 11% to 17%.

These numbers reflect real families, real grief, real hope, and real recovery journeys happening in communities across the country every day.

They also remind us why recovery support, prevention, treatment access, and family centered care matter so deeply. Addiction does not impact one person alone, and recovery does not happen in isolation either.

This growing awareness is the direct result of years of advocacy, storytelling, and communities refusing to stay silent about how addiction affects families across generations.

America is ready for recovery.

Learn more: bit.ly/RecoveryReady26

More Americans believe recovery lasts.New survey findings show that 47% of Americans now believe the majority of people ...
06/04/2026

More Americans believe recovery lasts.

New survey findings show that 47% of Americans now believe the majority of people who seek treatment achieve lifelong recovery.

That shift matters. For too long, stigma told people that recovery was rare, temporary, or impossible. But years of advocacy, education, storytelling, and visible recovery communities are changing public understanding in real time.

Recovery is real. Recovery happens every day. And more Americans are beginning to believe what recovery communities have known all along: people can and do build long term recovery.

America is ready for recovery.

Learn more: bit.ly/RecoveryReady26

Recovery belongs in the workplace.New survey findings show that **85% of Americans would feel comfortable working with s...
06/03/2026

Recovery belongs in the workplace.

New survey findings show that **85% of Americans would feel comfortable working with someone in recovery**.

That kind of shift does not happen by accident. It is the direct result of years of community education, advocacy, storytelling, and people in recovery showing up fully in their lives, workplaces, and communities.

Recovery is not a barrier to professionalism, leadership, or success. In many cases, it strengthens the exact skills workplaces need most: resilience, accountability, empathy, and determination.

America is ready for recovery.

Learn more: bit.ly/RecoveryReady26

Not every emergency needs the same response.988 connects you to trained counselors for mental health support, emotional ...
06/02/2026

Not every emergency needs the same response.

988 connects you to trained counselors for mental health support, emotional distress, and substance use challenges. It’s about care, connection, and de escalation.

911 is for immediate physical danger, medical emergencies, or situations where safety is at risk.

Knowing the difference can save lives and get people the right kind of help.

Whole person care starts with the right

The numbers are shifting.New survey findings show the percentage of employers who said they were less likely to hire som...
06/02/2026

The numbers are shifting.

New survey findings show the percentage of employers who said they were less likely to hire someone in long term recovery dropped from **27% to 13%**.

That kind of change is not accidental. It is the direct result of years of advocacy, community education, storytelling, and people in recovery showing up every day and challenging stigma in real time.

Recovery does not make someone less capable. If anything, recovery often builds the exact qualities workplaces need most: resilience, accountability, leadership, and determination.

America is ready for recovery.

Learn more: bit.ly/RecoveryReady26

Recovery belongs in the workplace.New survey findings show that 85% of Americans would feel comfortable working with som...
06/01/2026

Recovery belongs in the workplace.

New survey findings show that 85% of Americans would feel comfortable working with someone in recovery.

That kind of shift does not happen by accident. It is the direct result of years of community education, advocacy, storytelling, and people in recovery showing up fully in their lives, workplaces, and communities.

Recovery is not a barrier to professionalism, leadership, or success. In many cases, it strengthens the exact skills workplaces need most: resilience, accountability, empathy, and determination.

America is ready for recovery.

Learn more: bit.ly/RecoveryReady26

Cost should never be the reason someone can’t access recovery support.New survey findings show 52% of Americans cite lac...
05/29/2026

Cost should never be the reason someone can’t access recovery support.

New survey findings show 52% of Americans cite lack of affordable treatment as a top barrier up from 25% in 2004

That increase tells us two things: people are seeing the problem more clearly, and our systems still have work to do. This kind of awareness is a direct result of collective community education, advocacy, storytelling, and people in recovery refusing to stay invisible.

America is ready for recovery. Now access has to catch up.

Learn more: bit.ly/RecoveryReady26

America is clear: treatment and recovery support should be part of the response.83% of Americans support court mandated ...
05/28/2026

America is clear: treatment and recovery support should be part of the response.
83% of Americans support court mandated treatment and recovery support over incarceration alone.

That matters because recovery is not built through punishment by itself. It is built through access, accountability, care, and real support.

The public is ready. Our systems need to catch up.

Learn more: bit.ly/RecoveryReady26

Healing from mental health and substance use issues is not just the absence of symptoms. It is a stable home, meaningful...
05/28/2026

Healing from mental health and substance use issues is not just the absence of symptoms. It is a stable home, meaningful connection, and the tools to move forward. That is the promise of whole-person care. https://www.samhsa.gov/find-support

Address

50 F Street NW, Suite 350
Washington D.C., DC
20001

Opening Hours

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Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+12027370690

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