When someone has rehabilitated from a drug or alcohol addiction, it isn't as simple as starting life again where you left off. Returning to a successful and happy life takes time and a great deal of hard work. A Halfway House, a.k.a. a Sober Living Facility, is a setting where recovering individuals can go where they can live in a clean and supportive environment until they can live stably on their own. Living in a Halfway House may be a requirement of a person's probation or parole for example, or the individual might make the decision to live in a Halfway House of their own accord following drug or alcohol rehab. Either way, occupants of a Halfway House are clean and sober and working towards doing what is necessary to get their lives back on track. This could mean getting one's GED, finding employment, etc.
Halfway Houses in University Of Richmond are operated by individuals who in many cases were once residents of the house. How long a person is permitted to live at the Halfway House will differ, but it's commonly anywhere from a month to a couple of years. Occupants are required to submit to drug and alcohol testing prior to being accepted into the house, and this testing will take place intermittently to ensure there isn't any drug use in the house or addiction issues that would be more adequately addressed in a drug or alcohol treatment program.
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