City Council adopts sober-living program
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- The City Council unanimously approved a program Monday
designed to give the city an additional tool to monitor sober-living
homes, saying it was a welcome addition considering previous problems
with errant clean-living houses.
The county certification program -- four years in the making -- was
developed by a multi-jurisdictional task force in hopes that it will help
officials more closely monitor sober-living facilities.
Some of the recommended guidelines outlined in the county’s program
include specific requirements regarding staff, admission, intake,
building and grounds, monitoring, review, and a “good neighbor” policy.
Although council members engaged in no discussion before the approval,
one industry representative spoke against the new program.
Dave Riggle, vice chairman of the Orange County Sober Living
Coalition, said he disagreed with the guidelines, adding that it was a
waste of taxpayer money. He said the 50 operators that make up his
coalition have set up their own guidelines in an effort to monitor
themselves.
“Sheriffs don’t know much about recovery, but they do know about jail,
and that’s where many drug and alcohol abusers end up,” Riggle said.
Under state law, sober-living homes that don’t offer medical treatment
and have six or fewer people on the premises are not required to carry
permits for operation.
Perry Valantine, Costa Mesa’s director of planning, said city
officials are anxious for the program to kick in.
Costa Mesa hosts 106 group homes -- a designation that includes foster
and elder-care facilities, sober-living homes and drug and alcohol
treatment centers -- according to a 2001 report.
Sober-living homes have been an especially sore spot for city
officials in recent years. Costa Mesa houses 21 sober-living homes, the
2001 report shows, all of which offer no medical treatment and are
therefore exempt from state licensing.
The Board of Supervisors approved the Orange County Adult Alcohol and
Drug Sober Living Facilities Certification Process in December, and it is
scheduled to take place in October, officials said.
The Costa Mesa Planning Commission wholeheartedly endorsed the
guidelines, saying the program would benefit everyone involved.Although
it is a county-sponsored program, cities would share the burden and
monitor their own sober-living homes. Data collected by city staffers
would be transferred to the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, where
additional positions have been created to administer the program.
The idea that the city would be required to monitor the homes pleased
city leaders, who said the city would otherwise not even know some of the
homes exist.
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