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Rutland Coed Recovery Home
103 Park Ave,
Rutland, Vermont, 05701
About this Recovery Home
Rutland is a trusted recovery home in Rutland, VT, committed to helping men and women achieve lasting recovery from substance use disorder.
This recovery home offers a safe, substance-free space where individuals can focus on rebuilding their lives after addiction. Sober living homes, also known as recovery residences, provide structure, support, and accountability for those transitioning from treatment programs to independent living.
At Rutland, residents benefit from:
A welcoming and sober living environment.
Peer support to encourage personal growth and accountability.
Daily routines that build healthy habits and stability.
Convenient access to recovery resources in Rutland, including therapy and job support services.
Located in Vermont, Rutland is a vibrant community with a wealth of men and women-focused recovery meetings and resources. Rutland is passionate about empowering residents to create a stable, sober, and fulfilling future.
Contact us today to learn how Rutland can support your recovery journey.
Sober living homes are group residences for people who are recovering from addiction. In most instances, people who live in sober homes have to follow certain house rules and contribute to the home by doing chores. Most importantly, residents must stay sober throughout their stay in the home.
Our Mission
The mission of Dismas of Vermont, Inc. is to reconcile former prisoners with society and society with former prisoners.
Community is fundamentally about relationship and it is precisely the relationship between the person who has committed a crime and their community that is broken, first by the real harm done by the crime committed and subsequently by the alienation that results from incarceration. In reconciliation, wholeness is restored to the former prisoner and to society.
If we hold people accountable for their actions as a matter of justice, then reconciliation is a completion of that justice. For a former prisoner to be reconciled to their community that person needs to overcome the sense of alienation that sense of being an outsider and unwanted, they must become participating members of their community, and they must be returned to full citizenship with all its responsibilities and rights.