Pubdate: Sun, 22 Sep 2002 Source: Savannah Morning News (GA) Copyright: 2002 Savannah Morning News Contact: http://www.savannahnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/401 Author: Jan Skutch THE NEW STRATEGY OF SOBRIETY Starting Oct. 1, A Team Of Local Agencies Will Test The State's Latest Overhaul Of Substance-Abuse Programs David DeVaul arrived in Savannah broke, alone and hopeless. Forty years of, at-times, hard drinking had cost him a successful career, a marriage and family. It had robbed him of his desire to create art. "I had burnt all my bridges with my wife, my brother and all of my friends, period," DeVaul recalled of that May morning when he arrived here in early morning darkness. Today, DeVaul has been sober for five months. Through the Savannah Area Behavioral Health Collaborative, a partnership of four local social-service agencies, he is overcoming the darkness of substance abuse. It is a journey he must make each day for the rest of his life. He plans one day to teach art at the Savannah College of Art and Design. People such as DeVaul should be the major beneficiaries of the second major overhaul of Georgia's mental health-addictive diseases programs since 1993. A new law opened the door this spring for alternative service-providers such as the local collaborative to enter the field formerly controlled by community service boards. Passage of General Assembly's House Bill 498 followed a series of problems with the way some regional boards were handling their service-delivery duties. One of those, Tidelands mental health programs, sank in 2000 under a sea of red ink. Another, Gateway mental health programs, which picked up Tidelands, also faced criticism for the way it handled substance abuse and mental health care in Chatham County. Ralph McCuin, executive director of the Southeast Coastal Regional Board, said Gateway's stewardship resulted in improved services to more patients, but said "local politics" favored local providers and the collaborative met that demand. The Collaborative System The Chatham County collaborative takes over for Gateway beginning Oct. 1, bringing programs targeting chronic substance abusers to those most at need - - basically the homeless, indigent or those lacking insurance or money for care. Under a state contract with Recovery Place of Savannah, the collaborative is scheduled to treat 364 people monthly, or 4,368 a year, in return for state funding of $2.1 million. The contract is expected to be finalized this week, said Wayne Bland, executive director of Recovery Place and collaborative vice president. "It's not just the collaborative but it's the whole community," Bland said. "This is the most exciting opportunity I've seen for the community to pull together for folks in need." That brings into play collaborative members Recovery Place, Union Mission Inc., Memorial Health University Medical Center and the Chatham-Savannah Authority for the Homeless The collaborative's budget is about $4 million, with some of the needed funds coming from Medicaid reimbursement, HIV funds, and state Temporary Assistance for Needy Families programs. The partnership takes homeless advocate Union Mission and the homeless authority out of their core constituencies, moving them into a wider client group. "We want people taken care of," said Peter Doliber, Memorial's director of community benefits and collaborative treasurer. Members of the target group are uninsured, under-insured and underserved, he said. "They are not all homeless," Doliber said. The Rev. Micheal Elliott, Union Mission president who will fill the same role for the collaborative, said the group also has a proposal for adult mental health services which could kick in early next year. Behavioral health encompasses both substance abuse - drugs, alcohol or both - - and mental health. Or all of the above. "The state wants alternatives," Elliott said. He said Gateway, based in Darien, will continue to have a presence in Chatham County in other areas. It will continue to handle eight other coastal Georgia counties, including Effingham and Bryan. For the collaborative members, alcohol and substance abuse provide the same challenge. "We don't make a distinction because addiction is addiction," said Craig Cashman, executive director of the Chatham-Savannah Authority for the Homeless. "A drug is a drug is a drug." Central to the collaborative's effort is marrying housing with treatment. Cashman said housing is "critical to preventing relapse," a concept largely unaddressed in other models. "We need graduated levels of care," Cashman said. The Artist, The Alcoholic DeVaul, a 55-year-old Ohio native who holds a masters in fine arts from the University of Cincinnati, fits the collaborative's target profile. He is indigent, homeless and seeking help. DeVaul started drinking at about age 15, part of the mid-'60s culture of "sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll," he said. "It was rocking and rolling by the time I was in school (University of Cincinnati)," DeVaul said. "It was part of everybody I was around." After graduate school, he began selling insurance. Alcohol, not drugs, became his drug of choice, "I was a functional alcoholic," he recalled of 10 years in sales. "I worked for managers who were functional alcoholics." Very successful and very alcoholic, he said. When business bottomed out, he turned to art, opening an art studio and loved it. His art work - pastels and oils - is on display in several museums, 50 corporate collections and about 250 private collections, he said. He married in 1989, but his drinking quickly got him in trouble with his wife. In 1992, he got into Alcoholics Anonymous. He stayed sober for nine months until a plane flight to Mali for a delayed honeymoon steered him to free booze and a return to the bottle. "At the time it was foolish pride that prevented me from stopping the relapse early," he said. His wife left in 2000. So he found himself on a Greyhound bus at 3 a.m. in Savannah. He wanted to go to Charleston, but ran out of money. Once here, he wanted to get to the Salvation Army but a clerk at the bus station sent him across the street. "Across the street" meant Union Mission's Grace House on Fahm Street. Then to J.C. Lewis Health Center for medical treatment. He found help during a session on depression there. "It was like a light went off in my head," DeVaul said. "I realized I had been self-medicating (with alcohol) for 10-to-15 years." That help came at J.C. Lewis and Recovery Place's Residential Stabilization Unit. DeVaul is learning how to cope. He has found AA, sponsors and a will to overcome addiction. A partial hospitalization program is helping him to transition back into the community. "They give you the tools," DeVaul said. He is in after-care, attending group sessions at Recovery Place's Drayton Street offices and continuing with AA. detoxification programs for between 150-200 people who enter the collaborative through the hospital's emergency department. CHATHAM-SAVANNAH AUTHORITY FOR THE HOMELESS: will provide case managers for each person entering the collaborative to usher each to needed services. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth