The Cenikor Foundation is a nonprofit drug rehabilitation and mental health organization based in Houston, Texas, operating residential treatment centers and outpatient services for adults and adolescents in Texas and Louisiana.[1] Cenikor used to provide treatment based on the therapeutic community approach, but now provides detox, medically-assisted therapies, short-term residential treatment, and out patient treatment.[2]
Company type | Non-profit |
---|---|
Genre | Behavioral health, drug and alcohol addiction, mental illness, intervention, and unfree labor |
Founded | Lakewood, Colorado, U.S. (1967 ) |
Headquarters | |
Number of locations | 9 facilities |
Key people | Bill Bailey (President and CEO)
Kellee Webb (VP of Human Resource) Matt Kuhlman (CFO) |
Revenue | 21,514,981 United States dollar (2017) |
Total assets | 46,211,968 United States dollar (2022) |
Number of employees | 300 (estimate) |
Website | www |
History
edit1960s
editCenikor was founded in 1967 by James "Luke" Austin while incarcerated at Colorado State Penitentiary. Austin had previously worked at the new religious movement Synanon in California, and initially sought to start a Synanon spinoff group for Colorado prisoners. When his request to start a group under the Synanon name was rejected by prison leaders, Austin renamed the group Center of the Core of the Individual, shortened to "Cenikor," and reframed Synanon's confrontational attack therapy approach as reality therapy.[3]
After Austin's release, he married Doris "Dottie" Austin, and the two formally incorporated Cenikor on May 27, 1968. The first major facility, housed in a former bakery in Denver, Colorado, was funded by a donation from businessman Charles Kettering III.[3]
1970s
editThe Austins moved Cenikor to Houston, Texas in 1972, where the organization expanded rapidly via private philanthropy.[3] The Houston facility was initially located at 1101 Elder in the historic Jefferson Davis Hospital,[4][5] and moved to the William Penn Hotel in downtown Houston in the late 1970s.[6]
After an investigation by the IRS, Houston district attorney, and a state senator found that the Austins had been misappropriating funds, Luke and Dottie Austin were fired in 1977. Board members Ken Barun, Doug Sadbury, and Edward Fresquez took over leadership of the organization. In July 1978, Luke Austin and several other individuals, including his mother Helen Thompson, were arrested for attempting a violent takeover of Cenikor's Houston and Denver facilities.[3][7]
In 1977, Cenikor signed a year-round contract with the Astrodomain Corporation, establishing the Cenikor Astrodome Task Force, in which Cenikor patients perform painting, maintenance, field changeovers, and event set-ups at the Astrodome, the Astrohall, and the Astroarena complexes, with as much as three-quarters of Cenikor's monthly budget coming from this contract.[8][9][10]
After two years of operating an intake facility in the Dallas/Fort Worth area, the Winn-Dixie Stores Inc. donated two 100,000 square feet buildings in Fort Worth in January 1979 to help Cenikor establish a north Texas treatment facility.[11] Cenikor residents did the work converting the warehouse and two office buildings into a livable facility that could house 180 residents. The first resident entered the facility for treatment on New Year's Eve 1979.[12]
1980s
editIn 1983, Cenikor received national recognition from the President of the United States, Ronald Reagan, when he visited the Houston facility on April 29. President Reagan commended Cenikor for its ability to operate without government funding, and for its success in enlisting support from the private sector.[13] Nancy Reagan visited the Lakewood, Colorado facility on Tuesday, Aug. 10, 1983 during the national anti-drug campaign.[14] Nancy Reagan also visited the Fort Worth facility in 1986 alongside Texas Governor-elect Bill Clements as she handed out diplomas to 11 graduates.[15]
1990s
editIn 1994, Cenikor's Houston facility moved from downtown Houston to Deer Park, a suburb in southeast Houston. The new facility, located in the former Deer Park Hospital, is on almost 20 acres of land and 80,000 square feet in size, housing 180 residents.[16] In 1995, Cenikor opened an outreach office in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in a space provided by the city. This location referred over 150 to the Texas facilities each year.[17]
2000s
edit2007 marked 40 years of providing supportive residential therapeutic treatment services. Cenikor has impacted more than 40,000 lives and in 2007 had more than 500 residents in three long-term treatment facilities located in Deer Park, TX; Fort Worth, TX; and Baton Rouge, LA. In 2007, residents began attending college and vocational training programs in an effort to improve their quality of life while getting treatment at Cenikor.[18]
In 2010, Cenikor formed a strategic alliance with Odyssey House Texas to provide therapeutic community treatment services to adolescents. In February 2011, Cenikor began serving Lake Charles residents in the former state-run Joseph R. Briscoe facility. The 34-bed short-term residential unit maintains a high occupancy rate. The 12-bed medically supported detoxification unit continues to receive referrals from across the state.
On July 10, 2012, a ribbon cutting and open house was held for the new short-term residential facility in Waco. More than 200 people attended the event including Texas State Representative Charles "Doc" Anderson, Waco Mayor Malcolm Duncan, Waco District Attorney Abel Reyna, city councilmen, representatives from Hillcrest Baptist Medical Center executive staff and other community members. The facility began accepting clients on Monday, July 16 for short-term residential and Monday, July 23 for detoxification.
2010s
editCharlie's Place Recovery Center in Corpus Christi, Texas came under the umbrella of Cenikor Foundation in 2018. Cenikor announced its plan to introduce its long term residential program to the Corpus Christi facility at this time.[19]
In 2019 the Cenikor Foundation named Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards its elected official of the year, a yearly honor bestowed by the Foundation on one elected official who has done the most to advance addiction treatment policy.[20]
In 2019, an investigation by Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting, (affiliated to NPR and Public Radio Exchange) reported on coercive and dubious practices (including physical and psychological abuse) in conflict with Cenikor stated rehabilitating mission, including patients being assigned to perform physically demanding unfree labour for major companies including Exxon, Shell, and Walmart. Reveal reported that "tens of thousands" of patient-workers have worked without pay in Cenikor programs, and that this practice has resulted in nearly two dozen serious on-the-job injuries and a 1995 death.[21][22][23] Following the report's release, state officials in Texas and Louisiana launched multiple probes into Cenikor's operations. In addition, the Compass Group and others who had employed Cenikor patients as low wage labor ended their contracts with Cenikor.[24]
In 2019, Cenikor Foundation opened a new treatment facility in Amarillo, Texas. It was previously occupied by ARAD, Amarillo Recovery from Alcohol and Drugs.[25]
Locations
editCorporate office
edit- Houston, TX
Long-term adult residential facilities
edit- Lakewood (Denver), CO - 1967 to 2004
- Fort Worth, TX
- Houston (Deer Park), TX
- Corpus Christi TX
- Amarillo, TX
Detoxification
edit- Amarillo, TX
- Austin, TX
- Corpus Christi TX
- Deer Park, TX
- Farmington, NM
- Houston, TX
- Tyler, TX
- Waco, TX
Short-term adult residential facilities
edit- Amarillo, TX (adolescent and adult)
- Austin, TX
- Corpus Christi, TX
- Dallas, TX (male only)
- Deer Park, TX
- Farmington, NM
- Tyler, TX
- Waco, TX
Outpatient services
edit- Care Counseling Services - Fort Worth, TX
- Care Counseling Services - Killeen, TX
- Care Counseling Services - Temple, TX
- Corpus Christi TX
Adolescent residential
edit- Odyssey House Texas - Houston, TX
References
edit- ^ "Our Mission". Cenikor. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
- ^ Bailey, Bill. "President's Message". Cenikor. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
- ^ a b c d Clark, Claire D. (2017). The Recovery Revolution: The Battle Over Addiction Treatment in the United States. Columbia University Press. p. 155. ISBN 9780231544436. Retrieved 30 April 2019.
- ^ "Part of the historic Jefferson Davis Hospital burns in overnight fire | khou.com Houston". Archived from the original on 2014-02-27. Retrieved 2014-07-13.
- ^ "Cenikor-One Good Alternative", by Sherman Ross, The Houston Lawyer Magazine, September 1973
- ^ houstonist.com “Ask Houstonist:What’s that disappearing building?”
- ^ "Cenikor's founder Luke Austin's mother in simultaneous raid on facility in Denver". Newspapers.com. Valley Morning Star. 30 July 1978. Retrieved 30 April 2019.
- ^ "Strike taking toll on cities’ finances." Lakeland Ledger, July 11, 1981.
- ^ "Brief." The Montreal Gazette, June 19, 1981.
- ^ "Cenikor: The last stop before prison", by Rosalind Jackler, The Houston Post, April 29, 1984.
- ^ "In Old Fort Worth: Where Kimbell Hung First Paintings", by Mack Williams, Fort Worth News Tribune, Jan. 19, 1979.
- ^ "Cenikor opens its doors for troubled people", by Carolyn Ondrejas, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Jan. 3, 1980 Evening Edition.
- ^ "President pays visit to Cenikor facility, praises center’s work", by Jim Simmon, Houston Chronicle, April 30, 1983.
- ^ "Red Carpet Greets Mrs. Reagan", by Diane Eicher, The Denver Post, Aug. 10,1983.
- ^ "First lady gives diplomas to grads of drug rehabilitation program", Houston Chronicle, Feb. 19, 1986.
- ^ "Reaching out: Cenikor creates downtown facility to expand services", by Bernadette Gillece, Houston Chronicle, Dec. 14, 1994.
- ^ "'One Day at a Time'", by Chante Dionne Warren, Baton Rouge Advocate, Dec. 7, 1996.
- ^ "Cenikor celebrates 40 years of changing lives", by Carla Rabalais, Houston Chronicle, Oct. 25, 2007.
- ^ Young, Mark. "Charlie's Place: Partnering with nonprofit Cenikor Foundation a key to future growth". Corpus Christi Caller-Times.
- ^ Sabadie, Chad (12 February 2019). "Cenikor Foundation honors Gov. John Bel Edwards". brproud.com. brproud. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
- ^ "They worked in sweltering heat for Exxon, Shell and Walmart. They didn't get paid a dime". Reveal. 24 April 2019. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
- ^ "When "rehab" means patients do unpaid work for big companies". cbsnews.com. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
- ^ "Recovering from Rehab: Work-based Therapy in the US". aljazeera.com. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
- ^ Walter, Shoshana (16 May 2019). "Drug rehab faces investigations into labor practices and Medicaid fraud". revealnews.org. The Center for Investigative Reporting. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
- ^ Bullard, Richard (12 November 2019). "The Cenikor Foundation opens, offering alcohol and drug abuse treatment in Amarillo". newschannel10.com.