Pubdate: Wed, 21 Dec 2005 Source: Post and Courier, The (Charleston, SC) Copyright: 2005 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Glenn Smith Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) SUBSTANCE ABUSE RECOVERY COURT PUTS BROKEN FAMILY BACK TOGETHER AGAIN Angela Harley didn't think she had a problem with alcohol until a night on the town cost her custody of her two small children. In September 2004, the North Charleston woman was accused of leaving her 10-month-old daughter in the car while she drank for hours inside a Folly Beach bar. She stewed in jail for 45 days, her case splashed about in the local media, while her estranged husband Kevin cared for the infant and their young son. Then the other shoe dropped: Kevin lost custody of the children as well after testing positive for alcohol, cocaine and marijuana during a court-ordered drug test. "I thought my life was completely over, but it was really just starting," Angela Harley, 35, said Tuesday. Just more than a year later, the Harleys are sober, reunited as a couple and devoted to caring for their 2-year-old daughter Victoria and their son Michael, 4. The couple say they owe much of their success to Charleston County's Family Recovery Court, which works to reunite families torn apart by drug and alcohol abuse. On Tuesday, they arrived in court thinking it was just another session. But it was much more. After they briefed Family Court Judge Paul Garfinkel on their progress and their recent move to a new home, he leaned across the bench and smiled. "We all think you are doing so well that I have just one thing to say: Today is graduation day," he said. With their children in their laps, the Harleys leaned over and hugged each other tightly as the courtroom audience burst into applause. After 12 months of intensive counseling and rehabilitation, they were officially a family once again. Minutes later, Santa Claus appeared, showering the children in the courtroom with gifts. Their parents smiled as Victoria proudly held up a Dora the Explorer learning pad and Michael showed off a Batman utility belt, two of several gifts they received. "The Harleys worked so hard, and they have come such a long way," Garfinkel said after the proceeding. "When they started out, they were at the bottom of their lives. But they have done everything we have asked of them, and they never complained." The three-year-old court, which runs largely on donations, works to find permanent homes for young children who land in foster care as a result of abuse or neglect allegations against their substance-abusing parents. Their parents receive legal help and assistance from social workers, and they must undergo a rigorous program of drug counseling, testing and rehabilitation while reporting in regularly with the court. If they succeed, they get their children back. If not, the judge recommends that parental rights be terminated. Eight parents have graduated from the program, which usually takes 12 to 18 months to complete, and more than 90 children have been placed in permanent homes, said court coordinator Mardi Lempek. Seven parents and 15 children remain in the program. "This program saved my life. I know that," said Kevin Harley, 36, a fence installer by trade. Harley said he began drinking at age 13 and later became a daily alcohol abuser, often stopping at the package store as soon as it opened in the morning. His wife considered herself more of a weekend drinker, but now sees she had a problem as well. Angela Harley still maintains that she had no more than two drinks the night she was stopped on Folly Beach, and she denies leaving her daughter in the car unattended. In fact, the neglect charge she had faced recently was dropped by prosecutors. But she knows it was wrong to have her daughter with her on a bar visit after midnight and she doesn't fault the authorities for being concerned, she said. In the end, the couple said, the episode helped spark a change that has made their lives richer beyond measure. "It's a totally different lifestyle now," Kevin Harley said. "I live each day to get up and be with my family. Nothing else matters." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman