{
    "title": "Opinion: Illinois has a recovery problem \u2014 and it\u2019s costing us more than we think",
    "modified_at": "2026-05-19 18:04:46",
    "published_at": "2026-05-19 15:00:00",
    "url": "https://media.2ndstoryfoundation.org/opinion-illinois-has-a-recovery-problem-and-its-costing-us-more-than-we-think",
    "short_url": "http://prez.ly/xgHd",
    "culture": "en",
    "language": "EN",
    "subtitle": "by Jim O'Connor, CADC | May 19, 2026",
    "slug": "opinion-illinois-has-a-recovery-problem-and-its-costing-us-more-than-we-think",
    "body": "<p>Originally published in <a href=\"https://www.chicagobusiness.com/opinion/commentary/ccb-addiction-recovery-services-illinois-oped-20260519/?utm_id=gfta-ur-260519&amp;share-code=N73RLK2RUFD55DD5TB56Z2WOH4&amp;user_id=2106551&amp;customer_secondary_source=ccb_articleGifting\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><strong>Crain&#039;s Chicago Business</strong></a></p><div id=\"bookmark-4bd22c24-dc7f-4e18-a3c2-c0247b66a001\"\n     class=\"release-content-bookmark release-content-bookmark--vertical\">\n\n            <a class=\"release-content-bookmark__thumbnail\"\n           href=\"https://www.chicagobusiness.com/opinion/commentary/ccb-addiction-recovery-services-illinois-oped-20260519/?utm_id=gfta-ur-260519&amp;share-code=N73RLK2RUFD55DD5TB56Z2WOH4&amp;user_id=2106551&amp;customer_secondary_source=ccb_articleGifting\"\n           rel=\"noopener noreferrer\"\n           target=\"_blank\"           style=\"background-image: url(https://prezly.imgix.net/https%3A%2F%2Fcloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com%2Fcrain%2F4U5RYXMRN5GE5G2LVBXDMQTUME.jpg?ar=2%3A1&amp;fit=crop&amp;s=90cf6ab7bb1cb1ff5ef1238d586438ef)\"\n        ></a>\n    \n    <div class=\"release-content-bookmark__details\">\n\n                    <a class=\"release-content-bookmark__title\"\n               href=\"https://www.chicagobusiness.com/opinion/commentary/ccb-addiction-recovery-services-illinois-oped-20260519/?utm_id=gfta-ur-260519&amp;share-code=N73RLK2RUFD55DD5TB56Z2WOH4&amp;user_id=2106551&amp;customer_secondary_source=ccb_articleGifting\"\n               rel=\"noopener noreferrer\"\n               target=\"_blank\"               data-type=\"bookmark\"\n               data-track=\"Story WebBookmark Click\"\n               data-placement=\"content\"\n               data-id=\"4bd22c24-dc7f-4e18-a3c2-c0247b66a001\"\n           >\n                Opinion: Illinois has a recovery problem \u2014 and it\u2019s costing us more than we think            </a>\n        \n                    <div class=\"release-content-bookmark__description\">\n                Recovery requires more than short-term stabilization. People need time, structure, housing and a practical pathway back into daily life. Illinois has an opportunity to build more of that infrastructure now.            </div>\n        \n        <a href=\"https://www.chicagobusiness.com/\"\n           target=\"_blank\"\n           rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"\n           class=\"release-content-bookmark__provider\"\n        >\n            <img class=\"release-content-bookmark__provider-icon\" src=\"https://avatars.prezly.com/favicon?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.chicagobusiness.com%2Fopinion%2Fcommentary%2Fccb-addiction-recovery-services-illinois-oped-20260519%2F&newsroom=a4d08784-f74f-4f42-9983-d2c340305471\" aria-hidden=\"true\" />\n            Crain&#039;s Chicago Business        </a>\n    </div>\n</div>\n<hr /><blockquote style=\"text-align: left\">Illinois spends billions responding to addiction, homelessness and behavioral health crises. Much less is invested in the stage where long-term recovery either stabilizes or collapses.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bOver the past decade, the state has expanded emergency care, harm reduction, temporary housing and stabilization services. These interventions save lives and remain necessary parts of the system.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bMany people, however, leave treatment and return to unstable environments with no income, limited transportation, inconsistent support and little structure. The first weeks after discharge often determine whether recovery holds. For too many people, it does not.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bIllinois has built a large crisis-response system around addiction. The state has invested far less in the infrastructure that helps people sustain recovery, return to work and regain independence.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bEach year, thousands of Illinois residents complete inpatient substance use treatment, much of it funded through Medicaid. Treatment is an important public investment. Long-term outcomes depend heavily on what happens after discharge.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bMany individuals leave treatment with no stable place to recover and no structured path back into daily life. Relapse frequently follows. People return to emergency rooms, detoxification programs, temporary housing and other publicly funded systems. The cycle repeats itself at significant human and financial cost.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bDependency often continues long after substance use stops. Recovery takes time, structure, accountability and consistent daily engagement. Employment also matters. Regular work restores routine, responsibility and financial stability. Communities benefit when more residents are able to participate in the workforce and support themselves over time.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bPrograms that combine long-term recovery housing with work participation and peer support consistently produce stronger long-term outcomes. Individuals who stabilize in recovery rely less on emergency services and public systems. Workforce participation increases. Public costs decline over time.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bIllinois already has examples of this type of model.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bIn Will County, the Second Story Foundation has spent the past two years developing the 2nd Story Ranch Recovery Home and Jobs Program. The program combines structured recovery housing, workforce participation and peer-based support in a long-term recovery environment.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bThe project is fully designed and permitted. Local government support is in place. Workforce integration begins immediately for residents entering the program. The site is shovel-ready for construction.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bAn independent economic analysis projects a 9.25-to-1 return on investment over time through reduced public system utilization and increased economic participation.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bThis category of recovery infrastructure remains limited across Illinois. Long-term recovery housing connected to employment, accountability and reintegration exists at a much smaller scale than the need requires.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bMany projects struggle to secure funding because they fall between traditional categories. They require capital investment, operational discipline and long-term outcome measurement. Public systems often fund crisis response more easily than long-term stabilization.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bFor Illinois employers, this issue increasingly affects workforce participation and labor stability. Many individuals who complete treatment remain disconnected from work during the most fragile stage of recovery. Structured recovery-to-work programs help people rebuild consistency, develop employable routines and transition back into economic life.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bIllinois also now has access to substantial opioid settlement funding. Those dollars create an opportunity to invest in recovery infrastructure that strengthens long-term outcomes and reduces repeated crisis spending.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bRecovery housing, workforce integration and peer support programs can help protect prior treatment investments and reduce long-term reliance on emergency systems. Communities across Illinois already understand the costs associated with repeated instability, chronic homelessness and untreated addiction.<br>\u200b<br>\u200bRecovery requires more than short-term stabilization. People need time, structure, housing and a practical pathway back into daily life. Illinois has an opportunity to build more of that infrastructure now.<br>\u200b<br>\u200b<em><strong>Jim O&rsquo;Connor</strong></em><em> is the founder and executive director of The Second Story Foundation, an Illinois nonprofit developing long-term recovery housing and workforce programs for individuals recovering from substance use disorder.</em></blockquote><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>",
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            "description": "Opinion: Illinois has a recovery problem \u2014 and it\u2019s costing us more than we think",
            "url": "https://www.chicagobusiness.com/opinion/commentary/ccb-addiction-recovery-services-illinois-oped-20260519/?utm_id=gfta-ur-260519&share-code=N73RLK2RUFD55DD5TB56Z2WOH4&user_id=2106551&customer_secondary_source=ccb_articleGifting"
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    "author": {
        "first_name": "Ryan",
        "last_name": "Arnold"
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