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Wednesday, April 9, 2008
At the end of March, the Drug Policy
Alliance helped bring an important training to San Diego. The Recovery
Ambassador Workshop, offered by the Johnson Institute and hosted by
local re-entry program Second Chance, brings the tools of advocacy to
people in recovery from drug and alcohol addiction--but the skills the
workshop teaches are valuable for all drug law reformers.
DPA brought seven people to the training,
giving scholarships not only to people in recovery but to people who
believe that substance dependence is a matter of individual and public
health and that people struggling with current or past drug use should
not be discriminated against.
John Prieto, a Proposition 36 graduate
and a case manager at People in Progress in Los Angeles, received a DPA
scholarship to attend the training. He drove all the way to San Diego
from the San Fernando Valley to attend the all-day training on Saturday.
He was accompanied by several locals, including Reverend Dennis Malone,
an advocate for formerly incarcerated people, and Randy Hencken, an
active drug law reformer.
Margaret Dooley-Sammuli, DPA’s deputy
state director for Southern California, said, “Even though it was a
Saturday, the event was well-attended and people were very engaged.
Everyone took away something different from the training, but what we
got was more than skill-building. It was movement building.” |