Details Released for Gloucester Drug Addiction Recovery Initiative

17 Treatment Centers in 11 States to Partner with Gloucester

Police Discretion Used to Usher Addicts into Recovery, not Holding Cells

Police Chief Leonard Campanello today unveiled detailed plans for The Gloucester Police Department Volunteer ANGEL Program (“The Gloucester Initiative”), a revolutionary shift in municipal policing policy aimed at ushering heroin and opiate addicts into recovery and treatment, rather than jail cells and courtrooms.

The policy has been finalized and will go into effect on Monday, June 1.

“Gloucester is changing the conversation. Police officers exist to help people. Drug addiction is a disease, and drug addicts need help. We, the members of the Gloucester Police Department, are choosing to take direct action,” Chief Campanello said. “The stigma associated with heroin and opiate addiction is over. Police officers are here to help you, not judge you.”

The Gloucester Initiative is the product of a diligent policy-making and legal process involving the Gloucester Police Department, the City of Gloucester and the Office of Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken, partner law enforcement agencies, and legal counsel for the City of Gloucester.

Click here to view the official police policy document.

1. Expedited Recovery

Under the Program: “Any person who enters the police station and is requesting help with their addiction to opiates will be immediately screened into the ANGEL program and transported to the Addison Gilbert Hospital (AGH). If such a person who has requested help with their addiction is in possession of drugs or their drug equipment (needles, etc.) while requesting help, the items will be seized and marked for destruction, but the person will not be charged. Any officers having contact with anyone entering the Gloucester Police Department and requesting help with their addiction will be professional, compassionate and understanding at all times. The officer will immediately notify the Watch Commander that a patient is requesting help with their addiction.”

The patient will be required to complete an intake form and sign an agreement with the police department.

An officer shall be assigned to transport the patient to Addison Gilbert Hospital. The Watch Commander will reference a list of volunteer ANGELS to respond and relieve the officer at AGH. More than two-dozen volunteers have already signed up for the initiative.

Then the police department’s role ends, and treatment begins.

The Gloucester Police Department has partnered with Addison Gilbert Hospital and Lahey Behavioral Health Services to fast track initiative participants, and there will be plenty of assistance. The Gloucester Police Department has secured agreements with 16 other treatment centers and programs in 11 states, to handle special cases and overflow from the Gloucester Initiative and to provide additional resources.

In Massachusetts, Gloucester has been contacted by the Grace Center in Gloucester, F8 Foundation in Westborough, the Recovering Youth Coalition based on Cape Cod, and Wicked Sober of Boston. Elsewhere, the Gloucester Police Department has received offers of assistance from:

• McShin Foundation (Richmond, Va.)

• In the Rooms

• Morningside Recover (Irvine, Calif.)

• Palm Tree Recovery (Port Lucia, Fla.)

• Liberty Bay Recovery Center (Portland, Maine)

• Community Activity Recovery Enhancement – C.A.R.E. (Prairie du Sac, Wis.)

• Potential Behavioral Health (Fort Lauderdale, Fla. and New York)

• Advanced Health and Education (Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Florida)

• Benchmark Recovery Center (Manor, Texas)

• The Gardens at Lake Worth (Lake Worth, Fla.)

• Home with a Heart (Liberty, S.C.)

• A Road to Recovery (St. Lucie, Fla.)

Patients will also have access to the Triggr Health App to assist them during their recovery.

2. Narcan Availability

Nasal Narcan is now available at pharmacies without a prescription.

The Gloucester Police Department has finalized an agreement with Conley’s Drug Store and has received offers of support from CVS and Walgreens that will allow anyone access to the potentially lifesaving drug at little or no cost, regardless of their insurance.

The Police Department will pay the cost of Nasal Narcan for those without insurance by using money seized from drug dealers. 

Narcan is not a long-term solution, but it has the potential to save the life of an addict experiencing an overdose. 

“We cannot help a dead person,” Chief Campanello said. “The goal is to never need to use Narcan again, but right now it’s there to give addicts and their families another chance to come into treatment. It is a stopgap while we work to remove the stigma and barriers to entry.”

3. Police Discretion and Exceptions

The Gloucester Police Department Volunteer ANGEL Program was created in conjunction with legal counsel. One of the cornerstones of policing is discretion, which means that police officers can choose not to arrest someone even if the person has broken the law. This same concept applies to issuing speeding tickets, drug take-back programs, and gun buyback events.

“We are not trying to reinvent the wheel. Police officers already have the time-honored discretion to refer addicts to treatment or to simply not arrest them,” Chief Campanello said. “This initiative ups the ante by increasing the recovery resources available and making it much easier for officers to put people in treatment — and to directly make a difference in their lives.”

There are some exceptions to the initiative, including if:

• The subject has an outstanding arrest warrant

• The subject has prior drug arrests, which include a conviction for possession with intent to distribute, drug trafficking, drug violation in a school zone.

• The officer or Watch Commander expresses the reasonable belief that the ANGEL could be seriously harmed by the subject

• The subject is under age 18 and does not have parent or guardian consent 

If an officer makes initial contact with an addict on the streets or in the community, the program authorizes the use of police discretion to refer the subject to the ANGEL Program.

The initiative began with a citywide forum and a Facebook post by the Chief, which has now reached nearly 2.2 million people. Click here for more information on the post,

Save The Date- Please Join Us at The Studio For Our Small Business Persons Reception June 2nd 5-7PM

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I’d love to have all our FOBs come out and celebrate GMG’s award for Small Business Person of the Year.  It should be a great time, hope you can swing by and say hey!

Make Way for Ducklings

Mallard Duckilngs ©Kim Smith 2015JPG I was standing so still while filming yesterday morning that I don’t think the female mallard was at first aware of my presence. What a wonderful treat to see she and the ducklings emerge from the reeds growing along the water’s edge. They are amazingly fast and adeptly darted through the water and across the beach, as though they had been born months earlier. I was getting a tremendous cramp and had to stand quickly, which was mama mallard’s cue to chide the ducklings back into the tall grass.

Mallard female Duckling ©Kim Smith 2015Female Mallard and Duckilng -1 ©Kim Smith 2015

Peggy’s House, a Cape Ann Cottage

Photographs by Robert Lerch

GLOUCESTER, Mass. (May 26, 2015) – The Cape Ann Museum is pleased to present Peggy’s House, a Cape Ann Cottage, a photographic series by Robert Lerch. The one-day exhibit will take place at the White-Ellery House onSaturday, June 6 from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. The White-Ellery House is located at 245 Washington Street in Gloucester at the Route 128 Grant Circle Rotary. This program is free and open to the public.

Peggy’s House is a collection of photos, primarily interiors, all taken in one particular house in Annisquam. Built in 1761, “Peggy’s House” is one of only 65 or so known surviving Cape Ann cottages. Typically referred to as a story and a half with a gambrel roof, it was the vernacular house of the time. During the Colonial period, approximately 350 Cape Ann cottages dotted the coastline around the island, and were home to the many families who made their livelihood fishing and farming.

Robert Lerch said of working on this project, “I am fortunate and grateful that I was given the opportunity to photograph inside a very special Cape Ann Cottage, within the current owner’s daily living space.”

Robert Lerch is a contemporary fine art photographer who has owned and operated a gallery on Bearskin Neck in Rockport for 35 years. His work is sensitive, soulful, and full of substance. He uses all found material and works only with natural light.

Peggy's House: Blue Blanket

The White-Ellery House, located at 245 Washington Street in Gloucester at the Route 128 Grant Circle Rotary, was built in 1710 and is one of just a handful of First Period houses in Eastern Massachusetts that survives to this day. Unlike other structures of this period, the largely unfurnished house has had very few interior alterations over the years. Stepping inside today, visitors enter much the same house they would have 300 years ago. The historic home will be open this year on the first Saturday of June, August, September and October as part of Escapes North 17th Century Saturdays. Parking is available off Poplar Street in the field behind the house.

 

Lit House Book Club Event with Karen Skolfield at Duckworth’s Bistrot

june15_book_club_webKaren Skolfield’s book Frost in the Low Areas won the 2014 PEN New England Award in poetry and the First Book Award from Zone 3 Press, and is a Massachusetts “Must Read” selection. She is the winner of the 2015 Robert H. Winner award from the Poetry Society of America and the 2015 Arts & Humanities Award from New England Public Radio. Skolfield is an Army veteran and teaches writing to engineers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where she earned her Master of Fine Arts.
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Ducks, Geese, Egrets and Herons enjoying the Long Weekend

Walking through the Coolidge Reservation and around Clarke Pond is always interesting and fun especially at this time of the year.  There were many ducks and birds enjoying their environment.  To find out more information on the Coolidge Reservation please click on the following link.

http://www.thetrustees.org/places-to-visit/northeast-ma/coolidge-reservation.html

Celebrating the Life and Work of Roger Martin

GLOUCESTER, Mass. (May 27, 2015) – In conjunction with the special exhibition Bill of Lading: The Art & Poetry of Roger Martin, the Cape Ann Museum presents a celebration of the life and work of Roger Martin on Saturday, June 6 at 2:00 p.m. This program is free for Museum members or with Museum admission.

Roger-Martin
Roger Martin, 2012. Photo by Al Mallette.

Celebrating Roger Martin will take place in the special exhibition gallery where Bill of Lading is currently on view (the exhibition closes on June 28). A panel discussion will be lead by John Ronan, producer and host of The Writer’s Block. John will be joined by Greg Bover, Vice President of Operations at C.B. Fisk who will discuss Martin’s time at Fisk and bring examples of Martin’s carvings done for Harvard University’s Memorial Church; publisher and historian David McAveeney of Curious Traveller Press, the publisher for Martin’s Rockport recollections; Thorpe Feidt, Martin’s friend, Montserrat colleague and fellow artist; and his children Mari and Chris who will share their father’s poetry.

Bill of Lading explores the art and poetry of Rockport native, Roger Martin (1925-2015). A founder of Montserrat College of Art and a long-time member of its faculty, the town of Rockport’s first Poet Laureate and compiler of three books celebrating the people and poetry of his hometown, and a highly respected graphic artist, illustrator and painter, Roger Martin has long been one of Cape Ann’s most distinguished and creative individuals.

November Tide, 2003, oil and stick on canvas. Collection of the artist.
November Tide, 2003, oil and stick on canvas. Collection of the artist.

Support CCALS at Latitude 43 & Minglewood This Monday, June 1st

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cape ann dining news
http://capeanneats.com

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Lat43+MW_CCALSPosterHead to Latitude 43 or Minglewood Tavern this Monday, June 1st to support Compassionate Care ALS (CCALS); just come in any time after 4:00 PM and the restaurant will automatically donate a portion of your check to the cause!

PLUS you can use the opportunity to check out Latitude 43’s new Summer Menu, which will be launched tomorrow, May 28th. Here’s a taste of what you can expect…

NEW APPETIZERS 

FRESH BURRATA

Burrata cheese, arugula, basil, heirloom tomatoes, balsamic reduction & pea shoots

CEVICHE & GAZPACHO

Scallop & shrimp ceviche with poblano peppers, grilled corn & cilantro, served on Southwestern Gazpacho with fried tortilla points

NEW ENTREES

BBQ HALF CHICKEN

Smoked half chicken smothered in an Asian peach BBQ sauce with jalapeno cornbread & house coleslaw

SEARED SCALLOPS

Bacon, edamame & fresh corn succotash with a strawberry herb coulis

GRILLED SALMON

Curried quinoa salad with…

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Wednesdays with Fly Amero ~Tonight Allen Estes @ The Rhumb Line …New hours 7-10pm 5.27.2015

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Music Show runs 7-10pm!
This week’s dinner specials:
Grilled Salmon – $12.95
Chicken Stir Fry – $9.95

Wednesday, May 27th
Special Guest:ALLEN ESTES!

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                   photo by Sheila Roberts Orlando
We start at a new time this week (7pm sharp) as we feature Cape
Ann’s most popular and prolific songwriter, the amazing Allen Estes.
Come in early and enjoy great weekly dinner specials prepared fresh
by Rhumb Line in-house expert, Dave Trooper. ~ Fly
Dinner with great music!
*Each week features a special, invited musical guest!
Dave Trooper’s Kitchen…
*Prepared fresh weekly by “Troop”… always good!
Plus a fine, affordable wine menu!

Upcoming guests…
Katrin Roush

Dan King

Fozzie Hill

Charlee Bianchini

Visit: http://www.therhumbline.com/
Don’t miss it…
…ever! 🙂

GHS Softball vs Salem

Another super walk-off victory for the girls softball team. One more victory needed to get into the tourney.

Gloucester Tourists – Couple from New York

Couple from New York enjoying Gloucester.

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With Friends from Gloucester below.

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Got Fish? Boyhood at its Best.

I have a feeling there are many days just like this one in these boys’ futures.  I love so much that this is how they care to spend their days while growing up on Cape Ann.  Good friends, good times, good fishermen.  Watching them enjoy each other’s company like this, while doing what they love, gives me the total warm fuzzies.

Coastal Elite Cheer Academy & Club GRAND OPENING CELEBATION SUNDAY MAY 31ST 6-8 PM

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Coastal Elite Cheer Academy & Club

Home of the Coastal Elite Rebels All Star Cheer Team

Located at Browns Mall 11 Pleasant St., Gloucester

978-491-0004; coastaleliteclub@gmail.com

*Birthday Parties * Open Gym * Toddler Tumble Classes * Toddler Open Gym* All Star & Recreational Cheering * Fitness Classes * Tumble Clinics & Private Classes*Cheer Dance*

ADULT BOOT CAMP SESSIONS*SUMMER YOGA

GRAND OPENING CELEBATION SUNDAY MAY 31ST 6-8 P.M.

Cheer dance exhibition – Raffle Tickets and door Prizes –

Discount Class Passes – meet our instructors – summer session discounts

$25 Off Birthday Party Bookings

a chance to win 2 Red Sox Tickets with any purchase (excluding merchandise)

www.CoastalEliteClub.com

· Keep checking the website schedule for updates to the CEC schedule