The law firm of Moritt, Hock, Hamroff & Horowitz, LLP just won a landmark case for people in early recovery in Suffolk County, NY.
Judge Joseph F. Bianco of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York decided for the benefit of Oxford House, annulling Suffolk County’s local law regulating substance abuse houses on the basis that the law was facially discriminatory and was preempted by the Federal Fair Housing Act. The decision was a huge victory because upholding that law would deprive people disabled by alcohol and substance abuse problems of their ability to maintain recovery housing.
I’m from Oregon, and as far as I know, they don’t have sober houses there. Insomuch as recovering alcoholics and addicts are extremely vulnerable to that first drink or drug in their early sobriety, and it’s the first drink or drug that sets the monster loose, sober houses may be a good environment for a group of recovering folks to try to stay clean.
That being said, alcoholics do relapse, early recovery is a struggle to change the mind. The outcome of this case is a baby step in attempts to make laws more reasonable with regard to addiction and disease, from which nobody’s immune. Better to support recovery than not.
Sober Houses are a controversial subject, and your thoughts count.
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