Georgia DRUG REHAB AND TREATMENT CENTERS

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Drug Rehab Georgia
is here to help people with drug and/or alcohol abuse problems in Georgia. find treatment options. Due to our diverse networking system we can find a treatment option tailored to each individuals specific situation and needs. We are able to provide all phases of recovery included but not limited to, alcohol and/or drug intervention, drug and/or alcohol detox, in-patient treatment, out-patient treatment, short term treatment (30 days or less), long term treatment (90 days or longer).

Alcohol and Drug Intervention
Alcohol and Drug Detox
Inpatient Treatment
Short Term Treatment
Long Term Treatment
We design personalized treatment programs to provide each abuser with the greatest chance of a successful recovery outcome. Our comprehensive networking system works hand in hand with all of the drug treatment centers in Georgia. At Drug Rehab Georgia we know that each individual is unique and are treated as such. Deciding upon a treatment option in Georgia, or anywhere can be a daunting task for any individual or family, we will guide you through each step of a comprehensive treatment plan for you or your loved one. We are determined in our mission, that every drug and/or alcohol abuser in Georgia. that has a desire to change their life will be given a chance to recover from their addiction and we are dedicated to ensuring that they are given the opportunity to do so.

We realize that each individual in Georgia. is in a different financial situation and we will find treatment options for each individual regardless of their financial situation. No matter what your financial situation everyone will receive the treatment help they are looking for.

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Forgo politics and make Georgia safer for children

When children suffer because their methamphetamine-making parents put them in harm's way, it's an undeniable tragedy. However, it's no less tragic when children are hurt because their parents are addled by crack cocaine, heroin or alcohol.

A comprehensive child endangerment bill would hold all parents liable for reckless behavior that injures or kills a child, not just the parents addicted to meth. But a comprehensive bill has been stymied in the Legislature. So the GBI is drafting its own legislation, which would speak only to children endangered or injured by methamphetamine use or manufacture.

As the use of methamphetamine rises in Georgia, so do hazards to the children living in homes in the thrall of the powerful and dangerous drug. Four days before his first birthday, Chelton Hicks of Catoosa County was burned on a third of his body by a fire that Georgia police say resulted from his father's cooking of meth in a coffeepot over a propane flame. The baby died four months later.

"There's nothing out there to address this problem," says GBI spokesman John Bankhead. "This adds a little teeth to what's just gums now."

The child protection laws in Georgia wouldn't be toothless if the state Legislature weren't gutless.

Child endangerment bills have struggled for four years in the General Assembly only to be sabotaged by ideological lawmakers attempting to turn the bills into anti-abortion or pro-gun manifestos.

"When you have these amendments passed, other legislators don't want to take a contrary position on abortion or guns because it can be used against them as campaign fodder," says state Rep. Wendell Willard (R-Sandy Springs), the primary sponsor of the child endangerment bill.

The child endangerment bill shouldn't be hijacked to extend legal rights to the fetus or protect adults who leave their firearms within reach of children. The law -- which exists in some form in every state except Georgia -- is about justice for children who suffer as a result of glaring negligence by a parent or guardian.

As such, it ought to have the robust support of Gov. Sonny Perdue, who campaigned on a commitment to children and on passage of a child endangerment law. But Perdue was eerily silent last session as the bill was crushed under the heels of the radical fringe in the Legislature, who consider the rights of adults more important than the welfare of children.

His representatives promise the governor will have more to say this session, but they refuse to comment on whether he will offer his own legislation or back Willard's bipartisan efforts to resuscitate his bill. "He's exploring many avenues," says Perdue spokeswoman Loretta Lepore.

That would be fine if one of those avenues leads to passage of a law. But key child advocacy groups say they haven't heard a word from Perdue on child endangerment. Nor has Willard heard from him yet.

The silence may mean that Perdue and his young staff are hard on work on a comprehensive child abuse package that would yoke all child-specific crimes, now dealt with piecemeal and poorly in the Georgia legal code. Or, the quiet may be a more ominous sign that there's nothing happening on child endangerment and Georgia will remain the only state unwilling to protect its children.
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