The Annual NC “One Community in Recovery” Conference is a yearly conference planned by a statewide committee of behavioral health providers and advocates, many of whom have lived experience with recovery from mental health and/or substance use.
This year’s conference “Centering Equity, Justice, and Inclusion in the Recovery Movement,” held on June 9, 2021 focused on how racism and other biases affect mental health on personal, community and societal levels and what we can do to promote healing, recovery, and resilience within our communities and ourselves. Due to the ongoing need for social distancing, we presented the conference via live webinar. To foster interaction over the virtual format, we set up a “photo booth” for attendees to post their pictures and invited participants to record short video messages to share during the conference. Participants also appreciated the ability to un-mute and talk with each other during breaks and breakout sessions and made good use of the chat feature to network and share information. Attendance at this year’s event was 146.
This conference is an inspiring, informative event designed to foster the continuing growth of the North Carolina recovery movement, to teach participants how to get recovery programming up and running in their communities, to showcase some of the most progressive recovery practices, and to bring the community of providers and individuals in Recovery together as students and partners. Our goal is to educate and motivate participants to apply principles of Recovery in their personal and professional lives.
Upon completion of the conference, attendees were able to:
Thanks to our 2021 Planning Committee
Congrats to our award winners!
Youth/Young Adult Voice Award
The Youth/Young Adult Voice Award recognizes and celebrates a youth/young adult under the age of 26 in North Carolina who has dedicated their individual talents, whether through sharing their story, advocacy or volunteering, to successfully promote resilience in mental health and/or substance use recovery.
Nominations should describe how a youth/young adult has used their voice to do any of the following:
Educate agencies and the provider network workforce (including schools, child welfare, law enforcement and community based organizations) who support youth/young adults receiving mental health, substance abuse and/or trauma-related services; Promote recovery-oriented systems of care by advocating for meaningful youth/young adult participation as full partners in service planning and systems level decision-making; and/or Advocate for system-wide oriented change through youth-led/guided approaches that is trauma-informed, promotes positive youth development and individualized pathways to mental health and/or substance use recovery.
We can't wait for next year! See you then.