The Lifeline, Fall 2022

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LIFE

LINE THE VOLUME 6 | FALL 2022 GOVERNOR VISITS NEW CAMPUS Beshear presents $100k grant Pages 6-7 THE DREAM THAT CAME TRUE Goal to serve more clients advanced with purchase of The Ranch in May 2022 Pages 8-9

TRUSTING GOD, THANKING YOU

Annual banquet allows us to celebrate accomplishments, recommit to our vision

Table of Contents TRUSTING GOD, THANKING YOU

Page 3

LOUD & TRUE Page 4

Committed supporters lift ‘least of these’ out of addiction to honor our Lord

LONG-TERM SOLUTIONS

Extended residential program gives residents time to heal Page 5

Big crowd celebrates ‘Trusting God, Thanking You’

FIRST IN-PERSON BANQUET IN 3 YEARS Page 12

NOTHING SHORT OF A MIRACLE Women’s director shares her clients’ past, encourages their dream to move forward Page 13

ALL DUE TO LIFELINE Treatment helps Pannell reunite with children, get a home and a job Page 14

Annual banquet allows us to celebrate accomplishments, recommit to our vision

Anniversaries, birthdays, the holidays

– those are the times we often look back and plan ahead. Lifeline’s annual banquet is that time for me.

In August, we were able to have our first in-person banquet in three years because of the pandemic (photos, page 12). It was my first as the executive director, since I took this position shortly after our 2019 banquet.

FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

Ashley Miller

2014 Graduate of Lifeline

SEEING CHANGED LIVES Donor/volunteer sees connection to Lifeline as important contribution to society Page 15

As I thought about all we had to celebrate, the banquet theme, “Trusting God, Thanking You,” filled my heart.

Proverbs 3:5-6 says “Trust in the lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways submit to Him and He will make your paths straight.”

THE DREAM THAT CAME TRUE

Goal to serve more clients advanced with purchase of The Ranch in May 2022 Pages 8-9

FINDING HIS MILESTONE

Kenny Vasseur turns down a ‘different path’ for sobriety at Lifeline

GOVERNOR’S VISIT TO NEW CAMPUS Beshear presents $100k grant Pages 6-7 Page 10

GOLF OUTING 25 teams raise $30k for Lifeline Recovery Center Page 11

DONOR LISTINGS

January 1 - September 30, 2022 Thanks to our 2022 donors! Pages 16-18

2021 FINANCIALS Page 19

We trust God to make our paths straight at Lifeline.

First, with His help, we stay focused on our very big, very bold mission: “To provide Christcentered solutions to men and women with drug and alcohol addictions.”

Being Christ-centered is the reason why some people apply to our program and why so many stay sober.

CELEBRATING 15 YEARS

ASAM honors evidence-based treatment

NEW ACCREDITATION Page 20

As we look back, we celebrate our staff, more highly-trained than ever in our history; improved technology, and a focus on our facilities.

When we consider the accomplishments, we are filled with gratitude – for the lives changed, the families restored and the communities transformed when we break the generational cycle of addiction.

We are very grateful for the staff, volunteers (including our board of community volunteers) and donors who make it possible for Lifeline to offer long-term treatment and hope to about 200 people each year, at a cost far lower than most 30-day treatment programs. When our clients become sober, they reunite with their families, go back to work and become productive members of our community.

As we look ahead, we want to expand to help more people. Six people are dying in Kentucky every day of drug overdose – a rate that increased more than 14 percent last year. People are struggling right now, and the pandemic has added problems to those already struggling with addiction.

That’s why we must offer this Lifeline, and we cannot do it alone. We are thankful you choose to be a part of our story. Know that God is working through you, and He is saving lives every day at our campuses.

We are excited to see what the future holds for us, as we continue TRUSTING GOD and THANKING YOU!

Volunteer Anita Vance (with microphone) leads graduates, staff and volunteers in song at the women’s campus 15th anniversary celebration in May 2022.

FALL 2022 | 32 | THE LIFE LINE

“Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.” – Matthew 25:40

In a society focused on personal success and, let’s face it, marked by a lot of selfishness, that Bible verse may not be a concept you hear discussed in many circles today.

Here at Lifeline, however, those words, thankfully, still ring loud and true.

Generous volunteers and donors fund 75 percent of our operating budget, keeping costs low for those fighting addiction.

The board takes that seriously.

To protect and maximize your community support and create long-term financial stability for Lifeline, we:

• Diversify our revenue mixture. Prior to 2022, our only two sources of revenue were philanthropy and client fees. We have worked for years, including the efforts to receive national accreditation and state licensure, so we can develop a third revenue source. We are happy to report we are now beginning to receive reimbursement from insurance, which will enhance our financial stability.

• Grow annual support from two key community fundraising events, the Annual Banquet and Golf Outing. Support from these two events has increased dramatically over three years, thanks to the generosity of our community and the volunteer leadership of our board sharing our story with their network.

• Develop authentic, trusting relationships with donors to fund major strategic initiatives, such as the new campus for men and renovations to expand the women’s campus. Through these relationships and the growing awareness of Lifeline’s needs, some donors are considering their largest gifts yet, transformational gifts to make recovery available to more people.

We believe providing for the “least of these,” by lifting them out of their darkest days of addiction, honors our Lord, who continues to open doors for Lifeline. With your help, we will stay faithful on this journey to serve even more clients so that no one who wants to get sober will be turned away.

STRATEGIC INITIATIVES

Our success in realizing our mission will be measured by the extent to which we achieve the following:

PROGRAM AWARENESS

STABILITY

Achieve long-term financial stability to better serve the community by addressing the growing need for addiction treatment services.

PARTNERSHIPS

In future issues, we will discuss each of our strategic initiatives. To read the full strategic plan, please visit LifelineRecoveryCenter.org.

Addiction to opioids and drug overdose deaths continue to devastate families and communities in the U.S. – 107,000 Americans in 2021, with 2250 from Kentucky. That’s 6 of our Kentucky neighbors every day.

Lifeline Recovery Center has responded to this growing crisis with a new expanded campus for men and plans to upgrade the women’s facility.

Lifeline’s spiritual long-term residential program and aftercare offer many advantages verses outpatient or short-term treatment. The longer term provides residents the time and opportunity to receive spiritual enhancement, which is necessary to achieve a meaningful recovery.

Science and clinical practice seem to have been slow to acknowledge or study the spiritual dimension of the human experience, perhaps because the spiritual aspect is not easily defined in scientific terms. We have learned, however, that it is rare when simply science, medication or any human power alone can definitively relieve addiction.

Addiction involves complex neurochemical changes in the human brain. These changes occur over time and lead to self-destructive behavior. Consequently, time is needed to identify and change these negative patterns. Staying several months in our faith-based program allows our residents to develop and practice new habits in a structured, spiritual environment, promoting a more permanent renewal of faith and healthy lifestyle.

Lifeline fosters close, healthy relationships with peers in recovery. The opposite of addiction is connection – a connection with our fellow man, our higher power and our universe. By nurturing these relationships over a period of time, they are more likely to continue when our residents leave the program.

A prominent American professor, Brene Brown, has said: “Spirituality is recognizing and celebrating that

we are all inextricably connected to each other, a power greater than all of us. That connection to our higher power and to one another is grounded in love and compassion.”

Abstinence, faith and a relationship with Jesus Christ are the foundation of our recovery program.

We believe that better outcomes and the transformation to a meaningful recovery can occur when those who are burdened with addiction disorders embrace our long-term program and a spiritual change.

Addiction to opioids and drug overdose deaths continue to devastate families and communities in the U.S.: 107,000 Americans in 2021, with 2250 from Kentucky. That’s 6 of our Kentucky neighbors every day.

FALL 2022 | 54 | THE LIFE LINE
Committed supporters lift ‘least of these’ out of addiction to honor our Lord
LOUD & TRUE
FROM THE BOARD CHAIR
Steve Powless Executive chairman of CSI board
JOHN W. BRAZZELL, M.D. Volunteer Medical Consultant at Lifeline Medical director at Kentucky Care, Paducah
Extended residential program gives residents time to heal
LONG-TERM SOLUTIONS
FACT

BESHEAR PRESENTS $100K GRANT

For the second time in 13 months, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear visited Lifeline Recovery Center Sept. 21 – this time touring our new facilities at The Ranch and bringing $100,000 from the Team Kentucky Nonprofit Assistance Fund. Beshear’s visit was part of his effort to raise awareness of the state’s opioid problem, which claims six Kentucky lives each day from overdoses.

“This (opioid crisis) arose in our lifetime,” said the governor, “and I’m convinced we can defeat it in our lifetime.”

Several Lifeline supporters, staff and clients welcomed the governor to the new campus.

Executive director Ashley Miller said Beshear’s visit helps raise awareness of Lifeline’s residential treatment services. “We are so grateful for his interest in Lifeline,” Miller said, “and especially for this grant to help us expand our services.”

The grant was awarded from the state’s $75 million fund, created in August to provide one-time relief payments up to $100,000 for eligible nonprofit organizations that continued to serve during the pandemic.

FALL 2022 | 76 | THE LIFE LINE
“This (opioid crisis) arose in our lifetime,” said the governor, “and I’m convinced we can defeat it in our lifetime.”
WORDS OF ENCOURAGEMENT Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (center) speaks to supporters about opioid epidemic awareness and thanks Lifeline for its residential treatment services. LIFELINE RECEIVES $100k STATE GRANT Lifeline staff and board members accept the organization’s first-ever grant, $100,000 from the Team Kentucky Non-Profit Assistance Fund. Gov. Andy Beshear presented the check, after addressing supporters at The Ranch Sept. 21. The governor greeted (below) Shaun Sullivant, director of facilities; and other staff, volunteers and supporters.

THE DREAM THAT CAME TRUE

They had a dream. To happen at some time in the future.

Then came that Friday night.

For a couple of years, Lifeline’s board and executive leadership had been developing a long-term strategic plan to expand addiction recovery services for more people. They initiated many improvements – staff training, technology and programming – and dreamed of a new campus

this piece of property was made for us.”

Called simply “The Ranch,” the 46 rural rolling acres in Lovelaceville give Lifeline clients the seclusion and space needed for study and reflection on their sobriety journey. It includes like-new dorms, a chapel, commercial cafeteria and kitchen, transition living quarters, recreational space for family visits, and counseling and administrative offices.

“Wow!” was board chair Steve Powless’ first reaction

people,” Miller said. “It just encompasses our mission for individuals to be able to come out here from the darkness they’re in, the addiction they’re in. You couldn’t ask for a better layout for these men to recover and to get well in.”

The Ranch was announced at Lifeline’s “Trusting God, Thanking You” annual banquet in August. Powless said the board had been following the advice of the late Cardinal Richard Cushing, archbishop of Boston, who said: “Always plan ahead. It wasn’t raining when Noah built the ark.”

With the Ranch dream happening so quickly, the board has turned to plans to pay for it and to renovate the Morgan Lane campus, originally a homeless shelter, to house more women than the 21 currently served on the Bloom Avenue campus. “Thinking about planning ahead and Noah’s ark, we recognize that it’s already ‘raining’ on the Bloom Avenue location,” Powless said. “Flooding is a constant threat, and size forces us to turn away women who need us; so we’re going to have to get busy on their ‘ark.’ ”

Powless said many people at the banquet were moved by stories of Lifeline’s clients and the direction of the program. “It was humbling to see the number of people who came forward that evening, and after, looking for ways to support our mission financially or through volunteer efforts,” he said. “It has been remarkable!”

NEW RANCH ‘MADE FOR US’

A

designed just for long-term residential addiction recovery treatment. That was the dream.

Until that Friday night.

Executive director Ashley Miller, herself a 2014 Lifeline graduate, learned on that Friday night last February about a place that seemed like the dream come true.

“It’s like it was built for Lifeline,” she said. “We feel like

when Miller sent him the video that Friday night, showcasing the property for sale.

Within a week, Lifeline had secured a bank loan to purchase the property. About 50 men moved from the Morgan Lane campus to the Ranch in the summer.

“The Ranch allows us to expand and help more

Continued support from our community will allow Lifeline to change the lives of more clients and their families, he said. “We want to get to the point when no one who wants to get sober is turned away.”

If you’re interested in helping Lifeline achieve its dream of helping more clients, see LifelineRecoveryCenter.org or phone 270.443.4743.

46 acres in Ballard County

Can serve 80 men

3,712-square-foot event center

Dorms, classrooms, counseling and administrative offices

In-ground swimming pool and recreation areas for family visits

80’x42’ covered pavilion

Transitional living quarters

6.858-square-foot cafeteria and commercial kitchen

2 large stocked ponds

FALL 2022 | 98 | THE LIFE LINE
Goal to serve more clients advanced with purchase of The Ranch in May 2022
THE RANCH
46-acre ranch near Lovelaceville, developed a few years ago by an area church, features nearly-new facilities, such as dormitories, commercial kitchen, a chapel, office and recreational space, that meet Lifeline’s needs.

FINDING HIS MILESTONE

Kenny Vasseur turns down a ‘different path’ for sobriety at Lifeline

“Addictions can progress fast, and mine did.”

That was Kenny Vasseur’s experience in college, even though he did not have what some may consider the usual path to addiction. He was a good kid from a good family who never took risks in high school because he was afraid of getting into trouble.

That changed when he got to college and took his first drink to fit in. He found he couldn’t stop.

“I couldn’t just have a couple beers or a couple drinks,” Kenny said. “I had to drink as much as I could as fast as I could.”

Soon Kenny moved from alcohol to drugs.

For the next 10 years, he was what he called a “functioning drug addict” who held down a job. “I always justified my addiction by the fact that I worked every day even though I was spending almost all of my money on drugs,” he said. “I was miserable and going nowhere in life.”

In 2016, he tried meth, “the devil’s drug that will take everything from you.”

He then lost his job and got kicked out of his mother’s house. He spent his days looking for drugs and nights on “whoever’s couch that would let me.” He went through several 30-day treatment programs and jail sentences, until he was released by the court in July 2021 to go to Lifeline, where he found an encouragement that changed his life.

“One thing that gave me great hope right off the bat was something Pastor John Aitken said in class one day: ‘No longer do I have to call myself an addict, that can be a part of my past, but I can be a new creation through Jesus Christ.’ That statement gave me so much relief and hope. For years I had told myself that I would always be an addict, and now I know that isn’t the case.”

Since getting sober in the long-term residential treatment at Lifeline, Kenny now has hope for the future.

2022 ANNUAL GOLF OUTING

25 teams raise $30k for Lifeline Recovery Center

Twenty-five teams raised more than $30,000 for Lifeline Recovery Center at its annual golf tournament Sept. 30. Chair Todd Trimble, a Lifeline board member, organized the event, which featured stories of Lifeline clients about their recovery from drug and alcohol addiction. Many of Lifeline’s staff, volunteers and clients assisted at the Paxton Park event.

Tournament Sponsors Included:

• Event: FNB Bank

• Title: Independence Bank

• Putting Green: FCA, Eric Grogan

• Cart: Smith Contracting

• Hole: Steve & Nancy Powless, Williams Heating Air & Plumbing, Jackson Purchase, M&P Remodeling, Waterfront Services Co., Heartland Church, Jeff Alford, Randy Bridges, The Golf Complex Academy, Mid America Customs, Paxton Park, Animal Kare Center, Graceland Portable Buildings, Baird Group, Woodmen of the World, Stewart Girl Ministries, RHE Properties, Hutson, The Brown Family, WWL, Faith Center, Samsil & Holland, HT Hackney, Doe’s Eat Place, New Life, Raymond James, Milner & Orr, Community Life Church, Nesbitt’s Inc., Paducah Insurance and American Church Group.

FALL 2022 | 1110 | THE LIFE LINE
“Milestones are the plot twists in your life where you turn down a different path and entirely change the outcome,” he said. Lifeline is his milestone.
Kenny Vasseur, Lifeline graduate and now lead peer support specialist, speaks at the annual banquet. Thanks to FNB, and other sponsors listed at left, for their generous support.

FIRST IN-PERSON BANQUET IN 3 YEARS

Big crowd celebrates ‘Trusting God, Thanking You’

NOTHING SHORT OF A MIRACLE

Program director shares her clients’ past, encourages their dream to move forward

the death of her grandfather, who had been like a father to her.

“That knocked the wind out of my sails,” she said. “I went into deep depression and the worst part of addiction I’d ever experienced.”

As she sat in jail, again, she began to pray, daily. “I asked God, if He was real, to show me the way out,” she said. “I was so sick and tired of being sick and tired.”

When the court offered her three more months in jail or six months at Lifeline, she chose the longer stay because “I knew I had to build a life for myself not built around drugs.”

She recently celebrated seven years of sobriety, with her husband Brett, also a recovered addict, and their two daughters, ages 14 and 9. “It’s nothing short of a miracle,” Billie said. “Lifeline helped form me into the person I am today. They took a chance on me.”

Billie Preston, the 34-year-old program director of Lifeline, recognizes the look on each new client’s face as they begin their sobriety journey.

“They’re absolutely broken,” she said. “They look at the floor, they won’t look you in the eye.” She knows how they feel because she once walked the same path. For 17 years, beginning at age 10, she battled addiction to methamphetamines – a story that began, ironically, with alcohol when a drunk driver killed her mother when Billie was just 3 months old.

“I was a product of my environment,” Billie said. “It’s after my mother died, my dad was in heavy drug addiction.”

Through her teen years and much of her 20s, Billie’s story sounds like that of many of her current clients – in and out of jail, lost custody of children and, just when she was healing after rehab, the final straw:

Two years into her sobriety journey, she went to work at Lifeline, first as an office administrator and then as a program coordinator, before being promoted to the women’s campus director in February 2020, just before the pandemic began.

“During COVID, we continued to grow and serve,” Billie said, “becoming accredited and licensed. It’s been a blessing to watch us grow and become more professional.”

Her staff has grown from five to 14, and she helped the center qualify for Medicaid reimbursement for three levels of care. “What’s absolutely beautiful is that we can hire graduates,” she said. “We help them, so they can help others.”

Billie, a high school dropout, is focused on improving herself, too, as she works toward a bachelor degree in psychology. “I just want to be one of the ones on the sidelines cheering the clients on,” she said, “and building Lifeline into everything I know it can be.”

FALL 2022 | 1312 | THE LIFE LINE
Billie Preston, Lifeline program director HAPPY TO BE TOGETHER AGAIN Lifeline friends gather for the first time in three years at the annual banquet. The Ranch acquisition was announced (pages 8-9), and two graduates – Kenny Vasseur (page 10) and Stephanie Pannell (page 14) – shared their sobriety journey. WPSD anchor Jennifer Horbelt served as emcee, followed by speeches from executive director Ashley Miller (top right) and board chair Steve Powless. If you missed it, you can see a video at LifelineRecoveryCenter.org.

Stephanie Pannell, 31, took her first drink at 10, one year after her parents divorced. By 15, she was using drugs and out of school. Soon, she was using meth to cope with an abusive relationship. By her late 20s, she had three kids herself and suffered the loss of her mother from breast cancer.

“That’s when my addiction spiraled out of control,” she said.

When she walked into Lifeline a year ago, she described herself as broken, with no energy left to fight. She had lost her children, her marriage had failed.

“I almost lost my life in the midst of everything else,” Stephanie said. ”I was in such a dark place, I was just hoping and praying to be able to make it to the next day, even the next hour. I knew deep down that there had to be something bigger than me, but at this point I didn’t know what that would be.”

At Lifeline, she found her way with the help of understanding leaders. “I started to examine my inner self and get down to the root of my problems. The facilitators loved me through it, no matter what type of emotion I was feeling,” she said.

The six-month residential program helped her heal and, by the time she finished the three-month transition program in June, Stephanie had earned her GED and began a full-time job at Furniture World.

Stephanie moved into her own home and reunited with her precious three children last summer.

“Because of God, I have my family, my self-worth and my identity,” she said. “I have the ability to love and be loved. It’s all due to Lifeline opening their doors and never giving up on me.”

Kim (Felean) Jones, a retired office and human resources manager, never expected to be involved in addiction recovery.

“I have been blessed with a wonderful life,” she said, “and honestly I just didn’t see the drug and alcohol problems that surround us in our community.”

Her eyes were opened, however, when an out-ofstate family member became an alcoholic well in his late 40s, and the family couldn’t find a rehab center for him. “It seemed impossible that this was happening to our family,” she said, “and we didn’t know where to turn to help him.”

He found a good faith-based recovery center some 20 years ago and is enjoying a healthy, sober life; but that wasn’t the end of Kim’s story with addiction services.

Kim’s former co-worker at Bunzl, USA, Terrye Peeler, engaged her assistance in 2005-06, as they put together Ladies Living Free, the women’s program now part of Lifeline. Kim served as the first director of the women’s campus, and Terrye was Lifeline’s executive director. Both have served on the board and remain devoted to its mission.

When Kim began volunteering at Lifeline, she and her husband Keith began donating money. They remain regular monthly donors, as well as supporters of special events, such as the annual banquet, and specific requests, such as a recent request for new computers and capital projects.

“I’m an emotional giver,” she said, “and my husband likes to see specific needs where we can help.”

While she never planned to be part of the Lifeline story, she reflects now that it is one of her greatest contributions to society.

“You see lives changed,” she said. “God showed me a long time ago that whoever walks in our doors will never be the same again. We have people like (executive director) Ashley Miller who has completely changed her life. Even those who may leave the program – they may come back or, even if they don’t, many say years later that Lifeline shaped them in a positive way. I can’t begin

to describe what it means to see the changes in people that others had given up on.”

While Lifeline is growing and adding staff to reach more clients, Kim knows its strong foundation will never change.

“You’re as good as your people,” she said. “We have an amazing staff and board, and we couldn’t make it without our volunteers. That was true when we started 15 years ago, and it’s just as true today.”

While she doesn’t currently have a formal role at Lifeline, she remains open to fill whatever need God shows her. “Every now and then, God opens a door for new ideas, such as the ladies’ Faith Fit program we started two years ago. I don’t know what’s next, but I’m willing to do whatever I can put my hand to. I never want to lose touch with Lifeline.”

FALL 2022 | 1514 | THE LIFE LINE
Treatment helps Pannell reunite with children, get a home and a job
ALL DUE TO LIFELINE
“Because of God, I have my family, my self-worth and my identity.”
Donor/volunteer sees connection to Lifeline as important contribution to society
SEEING CHANGED LIVES
2022 graduate Stephanie Pannell reunites with her three children. Keith and Kim Jones

THANK YOU TO OUR 2022 DONORS!

JANUARY 1- SEPTEMBER 30, 2022

The following supporters donated to Lifeline Recovery Center from Jan. 1-Sept. 30, 2022. We are so very thankful for their generous support, which helps change lives and transform communities.

Gifts of $25,000 or more

Carson-Myre Charitable Foundation Trust

Ray & Kay Eckstein Charitable Trust

Ken & Beth Hunt

Steve & Nancy Powless

Gifts of $10,000-24,999

Faith Center of Paducah

Bruce & Doreen Hahn

United Way

Gifts of $5,000-9,999

Teresa & Ron Beavers

Susan & Ed Bredniak

CSI James Eickholz, MD

FNB Bank

Terry & Laura Haas

Household of Faith

Kim & Keith Jones

Meredith Schroeder

Gifts of $2,500-4,999

AAA Stowaway

Blythe CPAs & Advisors

Churk & Cindy Hall

Heartland Church

Darren & Lisa Jarvis

Joppa Missionary Baptist Church

Miller Hahn, PLLC

Darrell & Shirley Orazine

Christian & Mary Orsborn

Terrye & Glenn Peeler

Sharon Pegram

Powless, Ryan

Rosebower Baptist Church

Jeff & Heather Taylor, MD

Anthony Trimble

Allan Whitaker

Miller Equipment Rental

Eric & Ashley Miller

THANK YOU TO OUR 2022 DONORS!

Gary & Brenda Cardin

Rick Carr

Gifts of $1,000-2,499

Anonymous

David & Jan Bailey

Bandana United Methodist Bible Baptist Rev. Dr. Bernice Belt

Sid & Cathy Brantley, DMD

Brookport Church of God Community Christian Academy Jennifer Coursey Constantine Curris

Mason DeJarnett

East Baptist Church

First Baptist Church Free Spirit Motorcycle Ministry

Michael Gentry

Grace Baptist Church

Grace Fellowship Church Gospel Mission Worship Center H.T. Hackney Company Brandon Hall Jeff & Terri Holland

Jim Humphreys

Immanuel Baptist Church Independence Bank

Jim Smith Contracting

Wayne & Cindy Jones

Sloan Knecht

LaCenter Christian Church Rick Loyd

Marquette Transportation Company, LLC

Massac United Methodist Church

Sally Michelson Mid-American Machine Brad Moore Keith Murt Network for Good

New Hope Missionary Baptist Church

Newton Creek Baptist Church

William & Tammy Newton

Sonia Osman

July Overstreet

Papa John’s of Paducah

Pryorsburg Baptist Church

Purchase Area Health Dept. Purchase Ear Technology RHE Properties Robertson Hill, Inc

Dr. Kinney & Dr. Kathy Slaughter Richard Souder

Lee & Sheri Tucker

Jim Smith Contracting

Twelve Oaks Baptist Church US Bank

Gifts of $500-99

Anchor of Hope

Phillip & Sandra Bagwell

Baptist Health System Services

Bethel Christian Church John Brazzell, MD

James Brien William Brigance, MD

James & Brenda Brown

Scott Burnett

Stan & Missy Eckenberg

Richard E. Fairhurst, Jr.

Faith Baptist Church

John & Janet Foster

Four Rivers Behavioral Health

The Greenhouse of Paducah

Andrea Higdon

Robert Hill

William Litchfield

Larry & Mary McIntosh

Milner & Orr Funeral Homes, Inc. Ike Nichols

Don & Belinda Page

Allan & Jackie Patterson

Billie & Brett Preston Rail Services, Inc.

M& P Remodeling Greg & Traci Rodulfo

Rotary Club

Shady Grove Baptist Steve & Donna Seltzer

Sutton Investment & Retirement Partners

Pat Ellen Thompson

Rick Tilley

Norman Wallace

Woodlawn Cumberland

Presbyterian Church

Patrick Withrow, MD

Marianne Yontz

Gifts of $1-499

Jeffrey Alford

James & Barbara Allen

Amazon Smile Foundation

Rhonda & Anthony Anderson Cindy Bailey

Charles Baker Cheryl, Barenie John & Paula Benton

Thomas Berry

Don Billy & Ida Mae Jerrel

Carl & Elaine Bivin

Brantley Family Charitable Fund

Casey Brantley, MD

Randy Bridges Bryant Law Center Gregory Bugg

Linda & Thomas Bush

Stephanie Caldwell

Christie Canter

Glorianne Carter Fendley

Charities Aid Foundation of America

Chris Colson Auction & Realty

Christian Fellowship Raymond & Lynne Clark

J.W. Cleary

John Cohoon

Christian Combs

Concord United Methodist

Larry & Carol Conway

Kim Cooper Maggie Cooper Courtyard at West Park Village Dexter-Hardin United Methodist Chris Dick Dan Donaldson

Kathy & Gary Eckelkamp Janette Edwards

Kip Ellington

Emerald Therapy Center

Faith Life Class

First Assembly of God Allison Ford

Laurie Ford

William & Susan Gilland

Angie Glisson

Lisa Glisson

Rickie and J.D. Goode

Jeff & Vicki Gough

Tommy & Brenda Grooms

April Hancock

Karen Hensley

Earl Herzog

Kenneth & Joyce Hines

Robert & Carla Hobgood

Jay & Shari Holsapple

Daniel & Keisha Hopkins Mike Horn

J. William Howerton

Italian Village Pizza

Jackson Purchase Electric

Heather Jackson

Lisa Jarvis

Eddie Jones

Edwin A. Jones Frank & Lynda Karnes William Kilby

Earl Kinchen

Gregory Kingston, MD

Kroger Community Rewards Kathryn Lankton

Learners Bible Class

Bob & Gina Leeper

Robert Leeper

Ronald Mays

Shea McGuire

Wegina Meehan Howard Morehead Alma Moss

Sharon & R.W. Mumford Musgrave Realty, LLC Kevin Myers

New Hope Missionary Baptist Church Shea Nickell Snookie Oglesby

Danny & Rudele Orazine Doug & Sherry Orazine Jay & Sandra Orazine Foster Pearson

Scott Penick Dixie Phifer Lisa Poston Mark & Teresa Prude PSE Corporation

Radiant Hope Ministries Dona Rains

Cheryl Raspberry

Larry & Karren Reichart

Robert & Nancy Reynolds Nicole Rooyakkers

Craig & Susan Rothwell Darrin B. Rudolph

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Ann Rushing

Roberta Sewell

James Sexton

Shiloh Baptist Church

Robert Simpson

Matthew & Keisha Snow

Southland Baptist Temple

Delores Spears

David Stokes

Shaun Sullivant

Otis & Melissa Thaxton

Top Quality Consignment

Trace Creek Missionary Baptist Church

Triki Properties, LLC

Alicia & Larry Turner

Anita Vance

Michael & Debra Walker

Jefferson Wallace

Dale & Judy Warford

Waterfront Services Co.

Waterway AG Inc.

Dewayne Watson

Williams Heating & Air Inc.

Christopher Wooley

Steven Wright

Eric Ziegler

Business Donors

AAA Stowaway

Baptist Health System Services

Blythe CPAs & Advisors

Bryant Law Center

Chris Colson Auction & Realty

Community Christian Academy Courtyard at West Park Village

CSI Emerald Therapy Center

Elite Pain & Spine

FNB Bank

Four Rivers Behavioral Health

The Greenhouse of Paducah

H.T. Hackney Company

Indepence Bank

Italian Village Pizza

Jackson Purchase Electric M&P Remodeling

Marquette Transportation Company, LLC

Mid-America Machine Miller Equipment Rental

Miller Hahn, PLLC

Milner & Orr Funeral Homes, Inc. Musgrave Realty, LLC.

Papa John’s of Paducah

PSE Corporation

Purchase Area Health Dept.

Purchase Ear Technology Rail Services, Inc.

RHE Properties Robertson Hill, Inc.

Rotary Club

Jim Smith Contracting

Sutton Investment & Retirement Partners

Top Quality Consignment

United Way US Bank Waterfront Services Co Waterway Ag Inc.

Williams Heating & Air Inc.

Church Donors

Anchor of Hope

Bandana United Methodist Bible Baptist Bethel Christian Church

Brookport Church of God Christian Fellowship

Concord United Methodist Dexter-Hardin United Methodist

East Baptist Church Faith Baptist Church Faith Center of Paducah

Faith Life Class

First Assembly of God

First Baptist Church

DONORS!

Free Spirit Motorcycle Ministry

Gospel Mission Worship Center

Grace Baptist Church

Grace Fellowship Church

Heartland Church

Household of Faith

Immanuel Baptist Church

Joppa Missionary Baptist Church

LaCenter Christian Church

Learners Bible Class

Lone Oak First Baptist Church

Massac United Methodist Church

New Hope Missionary Baptist Church

Newton Creek Baptist Church Pryorsburg Baptist Church

Radiant Hope Ministries

Rosebower Baptist Church Shady Grove Baptist Shiloh Baptist Church

Southland Baptist Temple

Trace Creek Missionary Baptist Church

Twelve Oaks Baptist Church Woodlawn Cumberland Presbyterian Church

REVENUE

Donations and Grants 63% $757,608

Client Fees 25% $298,856

Fundraisers 12% $147,173 Other (Misc and Investment Income) 1% $7,710

Total Revenue $1,211,347

Donations & Gifts

EXPENSES

Program Services 73% $815,992 Support Services 18% $200,084 Fundraising 9% $105,532

Total $1,121,608

Client Fees Fundraisers Other (Misc and Investment Income) Program Services Support Services Fundraising

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES

ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2021

REVENUE UNRESTRICTED TEMPORARILY RESTRICTED TOTAL

Private Donations $609,397 $148,211 $757,608

Client Fees $298,856 $298,856

Fundraisers $147,173 $147,173

Other (Misc and Investment Income) $7,710 $7,710

Total Revenue and Support $1,063,136 $148,211 $1,211,347

Changes in Net Assets $243,437

Net Assets Beginning of Year $1,669,047

Net Assets End of Year $1,912,484

FALL 2022 | 1918 | THE LIFE LINE 2021 AUDITED FINANCIALS
THANK YOU TO OUR 2022

Lifeline

U.S. POSTAGE

KY

ACCREDITATION

ASAM HONORS EVIDENCE-BASED

Congratulations to our men’s campus, recently accredited by the American Society of Addiction Medicine after a survey that showed we met every requirement!

This accreditation acknowledges evidence-based addiction treatment appropriately matched to a patient’s individual needs.

This accomplishment follows recent accreditation by the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities and licensure by the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Human Services, all affirming Lifeline’s commitment to excellence.

Lifeline Recovery

Board of

Steve Powless, Board Chair

Ashley Miller, Executive Director

Sonia Osman, Board Secretary

Dr. Jeffrey Taylor, Treasurer

Rev. Dr. Bernice Belt

Missy Eckenberg

Dr. Jim Eickholz

Terry Haas

Robert L. Hill

Ken Hunt

Todd Trimble Mike Zimmerman

Center
Directors P.O. Box 7652, Paducah, Ky. 42002 | 270.443.4743 | info@Lif elineRecoveryCenter.org | www.LifelineRecoveryCenter.org
Recovery Center P.O. Box 7652 Paducah, KY 42002 NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION
PAID PADUCAH,
PERMIT NO. #44 To donate, text GIVE to 270.279.8262
TREATMENT NEW

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