Pubdate: Sat, 21 May 2005 Source: Kentucky Post (KY) Copyright: 2005 Kentucky Post Contact: http://www.kypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/661 Author: Jeanne Houck RECOVERY CENTER PRESENTATION SET Proposal to Be Outlined Sunday Transitions Inc. will sponsor a presentation Sunday on the residential recovery center it hopes to build and operate in Latonia for 100 male drug addicts. The recovery center would be modeled on the Healing Place in Louisville, which has been offering detoxification, residential and continuing care for men and women for 15 years. Sunday's session will include a short video on the Healing Place with stories of people who have recovered there, according to Mac McArthur, executive director of Transitions. It will run from 2 to 4 p.m. at Latonia Baptist Church on Church Street. Staff from Transitions, including McArthur, and Mike Townsend, Recovery Kentucky program manager from the Kentucky Housing Corporation, also will be available to answer questions. On Monday night, the city will conduct a public hearing on the site proposed for the recovery center. The public hearing will begin at 7 p.m. at Latonia Elementary School at 39th Street and Huntington Avenue. Transitions wants to lease property owned by Kenton County next to the Rosedale Manor nursing home. Neighbors, though, don't want the recovery center there, saying it is too close to their homes, the nursing home and Latonia Elementary. Covington Mayor Butch Callery has proposed that the residents let Gov. Ernie Fletcher know they oppose the center by sending him a transcript of statements they make at Monday's public hearing. Fletcher announced in January that the state is offering a total of $9.5 million in grants and tax credits to construct and operate 10 recovery centers across Kentucky. Recovery Kentucky is a joint effort by the Governor's Office for Local Development (GOLD), the Department of Corrections, and the Kentucky Housing Corporation. Its target population is people with substance abuse problems who are poor, uninsured or homeless. One-third of the residents in all Recovery Kentucky centers must be referrals from the state Department of Corrections. Maysville Mayor David Cartmell said earlier this week that his city would welcome a recovery center on secluded, vacant, industrial land adjacent to the Maysville Community and Technical College. That prompted the Covington City Commission to pass a resolution forwarding Transitions bid for a recovery center in Latonia to Maysville. McArthur said the suggestion that Transitions should apply in Maysville is unrealistic because Comprehend Inc., which provides substance abuse and mental health services in Mason, Bracken Lewis and Fleming counties, already is working on an application for a men's recovery center in Maysville. McArthur also said there is a need for a men's recovery center in Northern Kentucky, especially since the Kenton and Campbell county jails are overcrowded with people that include many people with substance abuse problems. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)