The Hope Springs Rehabilitation Center is celebrating its three-year anniversary.
Since the program began, fifty people have graduated and four more are set to graduate this month.
The program is set up to help people learn valuable life skills and become independent once they graduate.
"We support people in their sobriety to help reduce the impact that it has on their lives, so that they can create brighter futures through employment stability, housing stability, mental health stability," said Julia Cross, director of Hope Springs.
The program is six months long and has multiple phases.
During that time, people live on site in their own tiny home and have access to a kitchen, communal spaces, and therapy.
Volunteers and staff members also help teach financial literacy, household skills, and other useful life lessons to prepare people as best as they can for life after graduation.
If you want to volunteer or donate to Hope Springs, you can visit www.nnhopes.org
