36748Q1BD 36x110.5 Av1 7/23/07 3:46 PM Page 1 - Odyssey House

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36748Q1BD 36x110.5 Av17/23/073:46 PMPage 1

36748Q1BD 36x110.5 Av17/23/073:46 PMPage 2IT IS THE MISSION OFODYSSEY HOUSE:* To provide comprehensive and innovativeservices to the metro New York population who:* Abuse drugs* Abuse alcohol* Suffer from mental illness.* To provide high-quality, holistic treatmentimpacting all major life spheres: psychological, physical, social,family, educational, and spiritual.* To support personal rehabilitation, renewal, and familyrestoration.In all of its activities Odyssey House undertakes to act asa responsible employer and member of the community,and to manage the assets of the organization ina professional manner.A STEP AHEAD OF THE TIMESFor 40 years, Odyssey House has provided innovative services and achance for a new, drug-free life to thousands of teenagers, men and womenof all ages, and entire families. In the 1960s we enhanced the therapeuticcommunity model to treat heroin addiction. In the 1970s we began reachingout to drug-abusing pregnant women and mothers of young children. In the1980s we expanded our programs to meet the challenge of a crack cocaineepidemic. In the 1990s we designed special programs for the mentally ill andfor a growing number of elderly substance abusers. In the new millenniumwe have provided shelter and treatment to homeless addicts, many withspecial needs including HIV/AIDS. We will remain at the forefront ofsubstance abuse treatment in the years ahead.ODYSSEY HOUSE 2006 ANNUAL REPORT 1

36748Q1BD 36x110.5 Av17/23/073:46 PMPage 4As Odyssey House celebrates 40 years of public service to New Yorkers with substance abuse and mentalhealth problems, we reflect on the challenges earliergenerations faced in rebuilding their lives, how muchthese men and women taught us about determinationand hope, and what more we can do to lessen thedeadly toll addiction continues to take on the lives ofthousands of New Yorkers.Our founding in 1967 took place during a period ofsocial, political, and global upheaval for Americansfrom all walks of life. Civil rights, women’s rights, andgay rights created opportunities for millions of peopleto engage more fully in political, business, and community life. But along with these positive changes camenegative ones, not the least of which was the growingnumber of substance abusers who threatened to overwhelm limited treatment resources.Odyssey House responded to this increase with apioneering self-help model, the therapeuticcommunity (TC). This approach counters the despair of addiction withpeer support and the guidanceof positive role models.Over these past 40 yearsaddiction treatment haschanged considerably. Wehave expanded our treatment to include services forwomen with children, teens,people with mental and physical illness, and senior citizens.We have also extended ourholistic approach by establishingonsite primary medical clinics and anew full-service dental clinic.To be sure, significant progress has beenmade in preventing, responding to, and alleviating theindividual and societal costs of addiction, but so muchmore needs to be done.The creation of drug courts helped steer thousands of addicts from prison into treatment. Advocacyefforts by substance abuse treatment and mentalhealth organizations have raised awareness of disparities in funding, and national research instituteshave become more receptive to community-based2 BELIEVING IN CHANGEorganizations.At the same time significant challenges remain:discriminatory funding practices that pay less foraddiction and mental health treatment than otherchronic conditions; a legal system that criminalizesaddiction; and insufficient academic research that analyzes the effectiveness of community-based applications.These issues carry enormous consequences forhow society responds to addiction and the fate of individuals caught in its grip. We are fortunate to havesupportive partners who work alongside us to provide quality services that save lives and money.In New York State we thank our partners at theOffice of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services,Office of Mental Health, and Department of Health. InNew York City we thank the Department of HousingPreservation & Development, Board of Education,HIV/AIDS Services Administration, andDepartment of Health and MentalHygiene. And in Washington, DC, wethank the Substance Abuse andMentalHealthServicesAdministration.We also thank our corporate sponsors, foundationpartners, and “Friends ofOdyssey House” for their support, and members of theboards of Odyssey House andOdyssey Foundation for theircommitment to helping individualsand families achieve a healthyrecovery.We hope you will join us as we build onthese accomplishments over the next years.George RosenfeldChairmanOdyssey House and Odyssey Foundation Boards ofTrusteesPeter Provet, Ph.D.President and Chief Executive OfficerOdyssey House and Odyssey Foundation1967, Odyssey House opens in NYC withexperimental treatment program foradult heroin abusersTeen Leadership Center opens inthe East VillageAdult program opens on East 18th StreetResidential program for pregnant women andmothers with young childrenopens on Ward’s IslandOdyssey House Institute, Inc. opens facilities inMichigan, Utah, Louisiana,New Hampshire, and MaineOdyssey House opens in Australiaand New ZealandOpening of Odyssey House Havenin East HarlemFederal grants provide housingassistance for graduatesOdyssey House Haven Art Gallery opensOdyssey House Outpatient Services opens in the BronxNew funding supports smoking cessationOnsite dental clinic opens atOdyssey House Manor Family CenterOdyssey House Lafayette Avenue opens in theBronx offering residential treatmentfor teen girlsOrganizational restructuring, OdysseyHouse programs outside New Yorkmade independentOdyssey Foundation formed asfund-raising body forOdyssey House, NYOpening of Odyssey House Manor FamilyCenter and Odyssey House HarborOnsite medical clinics open at Manor, MABON,and Teen Leadership CenterOdyssey House offers Family Re-entry andShelter Plus Care apartments toprogram graduatesOdyssey House creates ElderCareresidential programOdyssey House Camp LaGuardiaopens, outpatienttreatment for homeless menODYSSEY HOUSE 2006 ANNUAL REPORT 3

7/23/073:46 PMPage 6BELIEVING IN CHANGE1967-200736748Q1BD 36x110.5 Av1BELIEVING IN CHANGEThe 1960s was a time of social upheaval. The antiwarmovement, civil rights, feminism, and gay rights allcame to the fore in this turbulent decade. So did experimentation with drugs. Smoking marijuana was part ofthe 1960s counterculture and a common feature of lifeon college campuses. Soldiers often used drugs for thefirst time during their tours of duty in Vietnam, andsome became addicted to “hard” drugs, especiallyheroin. Many brought their addictions home withthem, and heroin became readily available inAmerican cities.1967-2007In 1967, heroin use reaches epidemic proportions in New York andother U.S. cities, Odyssey House begins operating as a small residential unit at Metropolitan Hospital in East Harlem. This innovative program breaks new ground by treating substance abusers inthe group setting of a therapeutic community.component—the therapeutic community. In a 24/7 residential setting, treatment staff and men and women inrecovery formed a highly structured, peer-driven community that helped substance abusers re-establish theemotional strength and acquire the skills to lead drugfree lives.By 1970, drug addiction among teenagers, and the attendantdeath rate from overdose, begins to soar. In New York City alone,an estimated 100,000 teens are addicted to heroin.Odyssey House becomes the first program inthe country to treat this population.Teenagers are especially vulnerable to drug abuse,and even casual experimentation can lead to addictionto powerful substances. In New York and other cities,youngsters are often exposed to illicit substances atan early age. Many adolescent users have beenraised in a drug culture and come from homes shattered by drug abuse and the neglect and violence thatoften accompany addiction. Addicts as young as 12years old in Odyssey House programs have reportedusing and selling drugs like crack cocaine and heroin.Marijuana, though, is the drug of choice for this agegroup, and studies show that teenagers are threetimes more likely than adults to become dependent onmarijuana.Odyssey House recognized the growing drug epidemic among teenagers as early as 1969 and in that yearopened a 35-bed facility for this age group. Today,separate Teen Leadership Center facilities for boysand girls provide substance abuse treatment for closeto 80 teenagers in residential settings. Not only doparticipants address their patterns of substanceabuse; they also confront the behavioral problemsfrom which they have sought refuge in drugs and learnto live harmoniously as part of a community. Treatingboys and girls separately has proved to be especiallyeffective in addressing many of the behavioral andself-esteem issues with which many teens cope.While residing at the Leadership Centers, teens followa New York City high school curriculum and are taughton-site by Board of Education licensed teachers. Formany participants, the center provides their firstopportunity to develop the discipline and focusrequired to succeed academically. Encouraging studiesfrom the National Institute on Drug Abuse show thatdrug-abusing teens who participate in programs likethe Odyssey House Teen Leadership Center not onlysuccessfully break their dependence on drugs andalcohol, but also show a marked improvement in academic performance. Odyssey House counselors furtherenhance the future prospects of these youngsters byhelping them prepare for ongoing education and onthe-job training.Since these beginnings in (1967), Odyssey House hasbeen a leader in shaping the therapeutic communityas a highly effective method for treating substanceabuse. In a range of innovative programs in everexpanding facilities, Odyssey House has enhancedOdyssey House opened its doors in 1967, when hero- community living to include medical services, culturalin was taking a firm and devastating grip on the lives and recreational activities, educational and vocationalof many New Yorkers. At a time when methadone ther- guidance, housing assistance, day care, and other proapy was just about the only treatment available for grams to support the well-being of thousands ofheroin addiction, Odyssey House added an innovative clients.4 BELIEVING IN CHANGEODYSSEY HOUSE 2006 ANNUAL REPORT 5

36748Q1BD 36x110.5 Av17/23/073:46 PMPage 8BELIEVING IN CHANGEDepression and other mental disorders, low-selfesteem, and a lack of education and skills often leadadults to drugs and undermine their efforts to care forthemselves and their children. As a result, youngstersin such families are often the innocent victims of drugabuse. With one or both parents lost to drugs, they areoften virtually orphans, and a string of foster carehomes once was the only option for providing themwith care.1967-2007Recognizing the devastating toll that substance abuse takes onyoung families. In 1973 Odyssey House launches Mothers andBabies OFF Narcotics (MABON), the country’s first residentialtreatment program for pregnant women and parents with theiryoung children.and seeking the treatment they need. Pregnantwomen and parents of children 5 years of age andyounger reside together in parent/child units from 12to 24 months.To jump-start success in the real world, OdysseyHouse helps families make the transition from thetherapeutic community to independent living. Twoinnovative programs—Shelter Plus Care and the FamilyCenter of Excellence Re-Entry Program—help as manyas 45 families at a time make this big move to independence while still receiving many of the benefits ofa therapeutic community. Families who have livedtogether at Odyssey House as well as parents whoare being reunited with their children after leaving itsprograms have the opportunity to live in furnishedapartments in one of several fully supervised transitional facilities around the city. Substance abuse education continues in these facilities, and counselors areon hand to help residents master the basics of maintaining a healthy home, develop peer support networks, and in other ways set a firm foundation forindependent living.Families living in Odyssey House residential programshave access to a broad range of medical services. Atwell-equipped clinics, youngsters receive treatment forconditions that otherwise may well have been overlooked. Onsite primary care physicians, pediatricians,and nurses provide vaccinations, treat asthma, andaddress other childhood health issues. Adults in allOdyssey House programs have access to the sameexcellent medical attention. After a complete examination upon entering a program, residents can receivetreatment for diabetes, hepatitis B and C, HIV, sexually transmitted diseases, tuberculosis, and depressionand other mental health disorders—all ailments thatcommonly accompany substance abuse addiction butare often undiagnosed and untreated. Good healthpractices are essential to an addict’s full recovery, sothese clinics also conduct a variety of wellness programs that focus on such topics as smoking cessation,diabetes and asthma management, and safe sexualpractices.Odyssey House residents also have access to anonsite dentistry clinic where they can get treatment foroften-overlooked dental problems and develop goodoral hygiene habits.The treatment facilities provide the first stable homeenvironments many of the young residents have everknown. They take part in onsite, licensed daycare andpreschool programs, have access to pediatric clinicsand other medical care, and enjoy playgrounds andIn 1973, Odyssey House began providing an innova- leisure activities. Their parents participate in Odysseytive alternative to this pattern of drugs and despair, a House substance abuse treatment programs that helpprogram called MABON that allowed drug-addicted them address the problems that have led them toparents and their children to stay together while help- drugs and prevented them from providing healthying break the cycle of drug abuse and strengthening homes for their children. Medical care and health eduthe family unit.cation, parenting skills training, educational and vocational counseling, and job training are also part of theOdyssey House has been committed to building treatment regimen, ensuring that these parents will bestronger families ever since. Today, more than 200 able to care for themselves and their children in nurturparents and their children live in Odyssey House ing, drug-free environments.Family Centers of Excellence. Mothers and fathers donot need to choose between caring for their children6 BELIEVING IN CHANGEODYSSEY HOUSE 2006 ANNUAL REPORT 7

7/23/073:46 PMPage 10BELIEVING IN CHANGE1967-200736748Q1BD 36x110.5 Av1Addressing the link between substance abuse and schizophrenia,bipolar disorder, and other chronic mental conditions, OdysseyHouse opens Odyssey House Harbor.Meeting the increased needs of older Americans for treatmentservices, Odyssey House opens the country’s firstpublicly-funded ElderCare program.Men and women suffering from mental illness areespecially prone to substance abuse. The effects ofaddiction combined with the challenges of chronic mental conditions can be devastating, isolating these menand women from family, making it almost impossiblefor them to lead productive lives in the community, andoften rendering them homeless. At Odyssey HouseHarbor in East Harlem, specialists enhance treatmentin a therapeutic residential community with intensivemental health services and coaching in life skills ranging from personal hygiene to financial management.Up to 60 residents, most referred from city and statepsychiatric facilities, partake in supervised communityliving plus group therapy, work assignments, andvocational counseling and job training—all part ofWomen are especially vulnerable to crack, andOdyssey House was in a unique position to address8 BELIEVING IN CHANGEBELIEVING IN CHANGEAs the use of crack cocaine skyrocketed in New Yorkand other cities in the 1980s and 90s, demand forOdyssey House treatment services grew. With itsexperience and expertise in treating substanceabusers, Odyssey House was well equipped to meetthe challenges of this new epidemic. Service expansions included a new, 333-bed facility in East Harlemthat extended Odyssey House treatment to growingnumbers of adult substance abusers and addicted parents with children.1967-2007By the mid-1980s, New York City is in the grips of an epidemic ofcrack cocaine use. Odyssey House expands its programs to treat agrowing number of addicts.their special needs through its MABON program. Thedemand for this innovative approach to family treatment, in place since 1973, expanded greatly in the1980s as the number of women using crack and otherillicit substances climbed into the hundreds of thousands and as many as 10,000 babies were born tosubstance-addicted mothers in New York City eachyear. Many of these infants suffered with health problems stemming from malnutrition, neglect, and a lack ofprenatal care, and MABON was one of only a few programs in New York City equipped to provide the treatment and special attention they required.preparing themselves to take control of their lives andre-enter the community.When the time comes, Odyssey House helps thesemen and women make the difficult transition into permanent housing. Residents in treatment attend aWellness Self Management Techniques Workshop thatteaches such real-life skills as budgeting, making rentpayments on time, and grocery shopping. Once participants have successfully completed the workshop, aplacement specialist helps them find affordable housing, accompanies them on interviews with landlords,and helps negotiate rental contracts. In this way,Odyssey House helps break the cycle of relapse andhomelessness.As baby boomers, many of whom experimented withdrugs in the 1960s and 1970s, head towards late middle age and their senior years, the number of olderAmericans with substance addictions is growing dramatically. The federal Substance Abuse and MentalHealth Services Administration estimated 1.7 millionAmericans over the age of 50 are addicted and predictthis population will to grow to 4.4 million by 2020.At any one time, as many as 70 men and women takepart in Odyssey House’s ElderCare residentialtreatment program, and others attend a communitybased extension as outpatients. Residential and outpatient programs alike provide comprehensive services to help break their dependence on illicit and prescription drugs and alcohol. Participants engage ingroup sessions, seminars, and other therapeuticactivities, and are encouraged to involve family memAs the number of older people with addiction prob- bers in the treatment process. These men and womenlems increase, so does the demand for treatment. benefit from sharing their experiences with peers whoOdyssey House’s ElderCare program focuses on the have common backgrounds and experiences, as wellspecial needs of this populations whose numbers are as a desire to lead a drug-free life.increasing by as much as 20 percent a year.ODYSSEY HOUSE 2006 ANNUAL REPORT 9

36748Q1BD 36x110.5 Av17/23/073:46 PMPage 12BELIEVING IN CHANGE1967-2007Addressing the link between chronic drug abuse and homelessness, Odyssey House offers housing and support services tohomeless men and women with offers special needs.Many men and women have been reduced to a life onthe streets because untreated addictions have causedthem to lose homes, families, and jobs. Homeless drugabusers typically present complex challenges: theirsubstance abuse can be compounded by medical conditions, both physical and mental.Maintaining a healthy home is the number one priorityfor residents starting out on their own after completionof an intensive treatment experience. Butthe hurdles in finding affordable new homes ina safe neighborhood can be overwhelming for manyresidents.Odyssey House offers a continuum of care that assistspeople in recovery as they transition back into thecommunity. Ongoing supportive services, such ashousing, employment and legal assistance, beginbefore a resident leaves residential treatment and arecontinued in outpatient services.To help them overcome these barriers, Odyssey Houseoffers a range of housing services including: theOdyssey House Haven, a 63-unit apartment building inEast Harlem that provides permanent, independenthousing to formerly homeless men and women withmental and physical disabilities, supervised housingfor families re-entering society, and housing assistance for formerly homeless persons enrolled in ourprograms.10 BELIEVING IN CHANGEOdyssey House continues to provide new approachesto help men and women break away from drug abuseand lead healthy, drug-free lives. Many of theseprograms address total wellness, recognizing thatcreative expression and psychological and physicalwell-being are key factors in a full recovery fromsubstance abuse.other fitness activities part of their recovery regimen.Residents are also encouraged to take advantage ofOdyssey House creative arts programs, in whichparticipants express themselves through painting,sculpture, and other artistic endeavors; many of theworks are exhibited in the annual Odyssey House ArtProject. Changing exhibits of artworks—by bothprofessional artists and participants in OdysseyAddressing the fact that substance abuse is often House programs—fill the Odyssey House Haven Artaccompanied by smoking, Odyssey House has Gallery. The gallery is a celebration of the treatmentlaunched a Case Management Smoking Cessation and recovery process: creating art is highlyProgram that offers individual and group counseling, therapeutic for Odyssey House residents, and havingnicotine-replacement therapy, and education concerning their work exhibited in a public setting is a greatthe physical, psychological, and social aspects of source of pride.tobacco.Participants in all Odyssey House Programs haveaccess to fitness equipment and are encouraged tomake walking, running, yoga, weight training, andODYSSEY HOUSE 2006 ANNUAL REPORT 11

36748Q1BD 36x110.5 Av17/23/073:47 PMPage 14H HOUSE F FOUNDATIONThrough their generous support of initiatives thatbring people closer to Odyssey House, board members and other supporters are the driving force behindthe agency's development of new programs and services. They are also the heart and soul of an organization that is committed to helping people change theirlives. They voluntarily give their time and resources toensure every man, woman, and child who turns to usfor help is treated with respect and compassion.In the last year, Odyssey House received wide-ranging support from private foundations, business andcommunity leaders, and individuals. Their effortsenabled us to host our first 5K fundraiser benefitingtreatment and recovery services. More than 1,000people participated in the Odyssey House “Run forYour Life” event held on September 23rd at the IcahnInternational Stadium, on Ward's Island in EastHarlem. The run raised funds for our health and wellness services, including training and participation feesfor the Odyssey House NYC Marathon Team.to join gyms and clubs that endorse sober living. AtOdyssey House, residents can participate in regularexercise programs ranging from running groups, yogaand Pilates, to team sports.SPECIAL THANKSThe Rosenback Foundation and The Fan Fox and LeslieR. Samuels Foundation for their continuing support oftreatment services for senior citizens.The Elizabeth and Barets O. Benjamin CharitableFoundation for enhancing our services for women andchildren.McGrawHill Publishers for their ongoing donations ofeducational materials for our high school and GEDclasses.The Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Foundation foroutreach services to the criminal justice system forwomen with children.The link between physical fitness and a sustainedrecovery from substance abuse, has, in t he las t f e w The “Friends of Odyssey House” for their valuable indiyears, gained traction in t he tr eatment f ield. vidual contributions to our grassroots efforts to buildTreatment agencies across t he countr y ha v e s t ar t - comm unity support.ed to include regular physical e x er cise in t he tr eat ment programs and encour ag e people in r eco v er yBOARD OF TRUSTEESGEORGE ROSENFELD (H/F)Board Chairman (H/F)CRAIG J. MONTALBANO (H/F)Vice Chairman (H)Executive Director, Community PartnershipsNYC Department of Housing Preservation &DevelopmentRICHARD C. O'CONNOR (H/F)Vice Chairman (F)Vice President, MarketingAETNA Individual MarketsRONALD P. MITCHELL (H/F)Treasurer (H/F)PresidentCareerCoreJOHN M. MURDOCK, ESQ. (H/F)Secretary (H/F)PartnerEpstein Becker & Green, P.C.NEIL BRAWLEY (H/F)MARIA BRIZZI (H)President/OwnerGrace Costumes, Inc.JOHN R. DUGAN, JR., ESQ. (H)Dean of Faculty & Staff Relations &Counsel to the PresidentBaruch College The City University of New YorkADELE R. FADER (H/F)STEPHEN C. GROSS (H/F)Independent Financial Services SalesMARIANNE T. GUSCHWAN, M.D. (H)Clinical Assistant Professor of PsychiatryNew York University School of MedicineDEBORAH M. HURLEY (F)PresidentHurley JonesHUGH M. JONES, IV (H/F)PresidentIntrinsiQ ResearchHERMAN LARET (H/F)Managing DirectorCredit SuisseANDREW J. MCKELVEY (F)GRANT MILLER (H/F)Managing DirectorBank of America securities LLCROBERT J. MITCHELL, M.D. (H)Clinical Assistant Professor of PsychiatryNYU School of MedicineMARK H. MOZESON (H/F)Integrated Services Practice LeaderArchstone ConsultingMICHAEL N. POLLET (H/F)Pollet & PolletOFFICERS AND VICE PRESIDENTSPETER PROVET, Ph.D.President & Chief Executive OfficerOdyssey House & Odyssey FoundationJOHN TAVOLACCISenior Vice PresidentChief Operating OfficerDURGA VALLABHANENISenior Vice PresidentChief Financial & Administrative OfficerISOBELLE SURFACESenior Vice PresidentDirector of CommunicationsFRANK DOMINELLI, D.P.M.Vice PresidentDirector of Health CareROBERT RAICHT, M.D.Vice PresidentMedical DirectorJEFFREY SAVOY12 BELIEVING IN CHANGEODYSSEY HOUSE 2006 ANNUAL REPORT 13

36748Q1BD 36x110.5 Av17/23/073:47 PMPage 16Vice PresidentDirector of Clinical SupportServicesGIFTS OF MORE THAN 100,000Fan Fox & Leslie R. SamuelsFoundationRosenback FoundationTiger FoundationGIFTS OF 50,001 - 100,000Elizabeth & Barets O.Benjamin CharitableFoundationDaniel & Florence GuggenheimFoundationGIFTS OF 10,001 - 50,000BEA FoundationHeckscher Foundationfor ChildrenJ.P. Morgan Chase FoundationUPS FoundationVerizon FoundationGIFTS OF 5,000 - 10,000American Chai TrustB.J.K., Inc.Baird Family FundBarker Welfare FoundationGannett FoundationJames N. Jarvie CommonwealOverbrook FoundationRosie's For All Kids FoundationTIAA-CREFGIFTS UP TO 5,000291 Digital Llc30th Avenue Palace Food Corp.A.Landscaping & Sign/D.AbrahamAbbott LaboratoriesAdden FurnitureAETNAAnda Inc.Apple Custom Table Pads, Inc.B.A.S.I.C.S.Barnes & NobleBayard Advertising AgencyBell Medical Services, Inc.Bellco Drug Corp.Belmont Arthur Avenue LDCBert N. Mitchell FamilyFoundationBollingerBoston Clinton, LLCBristol Myers SquibbBuon Appetit Deli Inc.Canon Business SolutionsCeltic General Contractors14 BELIEVING IN CHANGECharina Foundation, Inc.CHASECity Arts, Inc.Coffee Distributing Corp.Columbia UniversityCostco EnterprisesCypress Motors Of RidgewoodDaytop Village Foundation, Inc.Deutsche BankDerle FarmsDoris Duke Charitable FoundationDriscoll FoodsDuso Food DistributorsEasy Does It Home ImprovementFerrari Driving SchoolFordham Supply Co.Freeman/Frazier & Assoc., Inc.Galaxy Office ProductsGarfunkel, Wild & Travis, P.C.Glickenhaus FoundationHealthpointHeidi-Co Vending, Inc.Hellman ConstructionJames A. Macdonald FoundationJayen ChemicalsJazzbo IncorporatedJohn ToddJoseph Weinstein Electric Corp.King Solomon FoodLaurence Werfel AssociatesLettire Construction Corp.Liffey Van Lines, Inc.Lower Eastside Service Center, Inc.Madison Service Corp.Managed Health CareAssociates, Inc.Mary Ellen Monen CallahanFoundationMilvia FoodsMormax CompanyMPPI Insurance ServicesMurray & Bernard SchussMemorial Foundation, Inc.NDRINew York UniversityOutreach DevelopmentCorporationOwenoke FoundationPalladia, Inc.Phoenix House Foundation, Inc.Posicare, Inc.Pumpkin FoundationRaskin CarpetsReckitt BenckiserRockland BakeryRotary Supply Corp.R.S.M. McGladrey, Inc.Samaritan Village, Inc.SOHO West GallerySolon E. Summerfield FoundationSols PharmacySuper Runners Shop, Inc.Survey Data Security Corp.Tasty EnterprisesTeachers Ins. & Annuity Assoc.The Glickenhaus FoundationThe Grads FoundationUnited Way of New YorkUrban Architectural IniativesWarren Elevator Service Co.Washburn Gallery Lindsay &Thomas, Inc.Weather Wise Conditioning Corp.Wedgwood-Crane & ConnollyWeeks-Lerman Group, LLCWilliams American Art GalleriesINDIVIDUAL SUPPORTMichelle AbbeyRona AffoumadoMark AmirSpiros AnthulisThomas ArmstrongJudy AuchinclossJeff BaerNaomi BaigellMelissa BeachMichael BeachyAldean BeaumontKevin BellRoger BelzSteven & Alicia BernsteinKim R. BerryBernard BlackKathryn BraineRobert BraineWilliam BraineJoan BrownPeter BuchmanChristine BurginSusan CaldwellPaul CamaraScott CampbellVinny CannariatoAlan & Linda CapilupiE.A. CarmeanColey CassidyGrace ChaoYolanda CharlesOscar ChaseStephen ChaseKathy A. ChazenAlexander ChristensenLaura ClementsAdina CohenPenelope A. CollinsJack ConnollyRoger CopeDan CornwellConstance CowenColin CumberbatchPatrick & Anna DiffleyMarianne DitommasoRich DunphyRoman & Eleanor DworeckiDeborah EgelJeffrey EinhornMarion & Stephen ElbaumChikezie EleaszDavid EllenhornSusan Ellershaw-GottesmanKianga EllisMary EmmanuelClay EnosJohn & Diana EngelJanice M. FetschBeatrice FiedorowiczFrank FiorelloJames & Joyce FischerKate FitzsimmonsScot & Anne FlammEdward FlinnThomas & Elizabeth FoxJames FreyRobert & Jane FriedmanEboni GatesTerry GedanWilliam GibsonHoward GoldmanDaniel & Sally GoldreyerRoberta GoodmanKent O. GoodwinCharles J.

Center and Odyssey House Harbor Onsite medical clinics open at Manor, MABON, and Teen Leadership Center Odyssey House offers Family Re-entry and . Odyssey House opened its doors in 1967, when hero-in was taking a firm and devastating grip on the lives of many New Yorkers. At a time when methadone ther-