Fall 2024 Lifeline Publication

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LIFE LINE

$13 million campaign to fund construction of women’s campus

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TOO MUCH PAINFUL LOSS

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Five from immediate family die from addiction; we must save more lives!

REPAIRERS AND RESTORERS

Our region responds to save lives and bring hope to families struggling with addiction

HAVOC IS HERE. SO IS TREATMENT

National opioid crisis real in our area, but there’s a Lifeline

LIFELINE FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN TO INCLUDE NEW WOMEN’S CAMPUS

Lifeline announces $13 million campaign

COMMITTEE SEEKS DONATIONS FOR $13 MILLION CAPITAL CAMPAIGN

LIFELINE’S ANNUAL BANQUET

Almost 500 at annual banquet raise $105k

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ā€˜GOD PUT IT ALL TOGETHER’

Donations provide library for men’s campus

NORMALCY, WONDERFUL NORMALCY

Addicted mother could not dream of a normal life, until Lifeline treatment

PAINFUL RELAPSE, SWEET RECOVERY

When sobriety faltered, Payton found success with God’s help at Lifeline

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DONORLISTINGS

January 1- September 30, 2024, Thanks to our 2024 donors!

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2023 AUDITED FINANCIALS

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Pages 14-15

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Our thanks to sponsors and about 100 golfers who raised $44,000 at our 15th annual golf tournament. This winning foursome (Michael Nesbitt, Mikey Morrison, Kevin Nesbitt, Nick Daughtery) represented Nesbitt’s Docks and Boat Lifts. The runner up team at our Sept. 6 tournament at Paxton Park includes David Bailey with Paducah Bank; Gabe Wheeler, Kinney Slaughter and Mark Knecht.

TOO MUCH PAINFUL LOSS

Five from immediate family die from addiction; we must save more lives!

We can’t remind you of this sad fact often enough: Six Kentuckians die every day from addiction.

Many of you have felt the pain of losing a loved one. For friends, neighbors, co-workers, mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, children – especially the children, life is never the same, that pain never goes away.

Ashley Miller 2014 Graduate of Lifeline

I understand this pain deeply and very personally. When I entered Lifeline in 2013, I had already lost my father to an overdose. After I completed the program, my own family was still in active addiction. I wanted to show them there was hope, that I finally found a way out. I wanted them to find the same freedom I had found. But that’s not how my story played out.

Ashley Miller(left)withhertwoniecesandher fatherandsister

Instead, I found sobriety, but lost, in this order, my brother-in-law, my mom, my only sister, and just last year, my stepson — all due to drug and alcoholrelated issues.

This program has given me much more than just sobriety. It has given me the strength, faith, determination and passion to keep going, to keep fighting for those who need our help, to show up for them and never give up.

On my journey from addict to Executive Director, I am forever grateful for the miracle in my life and the miraclesthatkeephappeningeveryyearatLifeline.In Lifeline's20years,some2,500peoplehave experiencedmysamestory,findinghopeandhealing

andanewlifefreefromaddiction.Morelivesneedsaving,andmorefamiliesneedrestoring.

That’s why we’ve announced plans for a new women’s campus (see story on pages 6-7). We will break ground November 11 on the 45-acre campus near Barkley Regional Airport. It will bring hope to twice as many women, a hope shared by our community as evident in the rapid fundraising results of $11.6 million toward a $13 million goal.

Being able to serve more women brings me great joy, thinking of Lifeline’s positive impact on so many lives, including mine. This new campus breathes new life into our mission!

It’s been very encouraging to meet many of you who have stepped up to help us in this effort Thanks to you, we are one day closer to seeing the new campus come to life.

whohavediedfromaddiction.

Our region responds to

save

lives and bring hope to families struggling with addiction REPAIRERS AND RESTORERS

Sometimes it feels like whiplash when considering the four years since I joined the Lifeline board -- first realizing the scope of the addiction epidemic facing us and then being blessed with an abundance of solutions.

Big needs, big plans.

Six Kentuckians are dying each day from overdoses. And thousands more are struggling with addictions –losing their jobs, their homes, their families. The human toll is uncountable, often unspeakable.

Every one of us knows someone affected. We’ve seen the pain up close and personal.

That’s why Lifeline Recovery Center began 20 years ago; and that’s why it continues to expand, including the addition of a 45-acre men’s campus in Ballard County two years ago and the recent 45-acre acquisition near Barkley Regional Airport to develop a new women’s campus.

At our annual banquet in June, we announced the new women’s campus, being funded by ā€œA Campaign for Recovery: Breaking the Cycle of Addiction, One Life at a Time.ā€ The capital campaign to meet Lifeline’s current and future needs has met with tremendous success, raising a phenomenal $11.6 million toward the $13 million goal.

Big hearts, big response.

How does this community do it? This region raises millions for the arts, healthcare, churches, schools, social service organizations – all critical projects that make our community what it is.

As Lifeline leaders examined the needs for recovery and began building a strategy four years ago for yet another critical fundraising project, we knew there were many other needs clamoring for limited dollars.

We also knew how great Lifeline’s need was and how big the hearts of our region are. We are amazed at the response and very grateful.

Big God.

The men’s campus was outfitted almost perfectly when purchased two years ago, and we have beautiful plans in place to turn the new property into an equally perfect women’s campus. We have been astounded by God’s grace in providing these two amazing properties, almost identical in size!

As it has always been with Lifeline, this campaign is not just about raising funds; it’s about building a community of support, united in the belief that every life is worth saving. It’s about faith that inspires us to dream bigger, reach higher, and strive harder in our quest to save lives and restore hope for those struggling with addiction and seeking a new life in sobriety.

In the spirit of our mission, I invite each of you to prayerfully consider joining us on this remarkable journey. Your support, whether through time, resources, or prayer, is invaluable as we continue to make a difference in the lives of those we serve.

As each of us contemplates our path ahead, let us be encouraged by the words from Isaiah 58:12, ā€œYour people will rebuild the ancient ruins and will raise up the age-old foundations; you will be called Repairer of Broken Walls, Restorer of Streets with Dwellings.ā€

We are committed to being repairers of broken lives and restorers of hope. Will you join us?

National opioid crisis real in our area, but there’s a Lifeline HAVOC IS HERE. SO IS TREATMENT

The national news often focuses on the opioid crisis in Appalachia, the East Coast and the West Coast. Sadly, opioids, particularly fentanyl, are not limited to these markets. They have infiltrated much of our country, including Kentucky, because of one simple fact –they’re cheap.

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid, much cheaper and faster to produce than heroin. It’s easier and more discreet to transport to meet a growing demand. It is mixed into counterfeit opioid pills, mixed with other drugs such as methamphetamine, marijuana and vape/pipe substances, or sold alone as a white powder.

And it’s wreaking havoc in the lives of Kentuckians, including those in western Kentucky.

Drug overdose deaths have increased to historic levels. Overdose deaths in the U.S. totaled 107,543 in 2023. Overdose deaths in Kentucky totaled 2135 in 2022, 1984 in 2023 and 2100 are projected for 2024.

A frequently overlooked problem associated with opiate use disorder is the comorbidity associated with drug use, such as outbreaks of HIV and/or hepatitis C.According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, heroin use increases the risk of being exposed to HIV, viral hepatitis and other infectious diseases through contact with infected blood or body fluids from the sharing of syringes and injection paraphernalia with infected people. Each infected person who injects drugs may infect 20 other people. These illnesses also are not confined to Appalachia and metropolitan areas, but are occurring across our state. Rural communities in McCracken and throughout western Kentucky counties are disproportionately affected by new HIV and HCV infections, making the area vulnerable to rapid spread of those diseases among people who inject drugs.

I wish I could say that opiate addiction will be defeated, but this problem will never go away. We all must work diligently together to combat the crisis with all

Volunteer Medical Consultant at Lifeline Physician at Kentucky Care

spiritual, medical and psychosocial modalities which have proven to be successful. Lifeline Recovery Center remains committed to this effort with the move of the men’s program to the Ballard County campus and plans for a new women’s campus, both of which increase the number of people who can be served in the long-term residential treatment.

FACT

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 FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN TO INCLUDE NEW WOMEN’S CAMPUS

Less than two years after acquiring a new 45-acre men’s campus in Ballard County, Lifeline Recovery Center has announced a new 45-acre women’s campus in McCracken County and a major fundraising campaign.

Both were announced at the 20th annual banquet in June by board chair Steve Powless.

The new women’s campus will be developed at 8650 Old Highway 60, near Barkley Regional Airport.

ā€œA Campaign for Recovery: Breaking the Cycle of Addiction, One Life at a Timeā€ has already raised $11.6 million, or 89 percent of its $13 million goal. The campaign began quietly in 2023 and is expected to conclude in 2026.

The funds will provide $7 million for the new campuses, including the purchase of both 45-acre properties and significant new construction on the women’s campus, including a new chapel, housing, dining, educational, counseling and administrative space. The men’s campus was already outfitted with those buildings when purchased.

The campaign also includes $3 million to grow Lifeline’s licensed and certified professional staff, reducing staffto-client ratios, and $3 million for an endowment for long-term financial sustainability.

Powless said construction is expected to begin late this year.

The women’s campus currently is on Morgan Lane. When the men’s campus moved from there to Ballard County in 2022, the women’s campus moved from Bloom

Avenue to Morgan Lane. When the women’s program moves to its new campus, Lifeline will determine the use for facilities on Morgan Lane, with possibilities ranging from sober living quarters for men to outpatient services.

Powless said both the men’s and women’s new campuses offer room for future expansion. ā€œOur creativity has been limited only by the lack of space,ā€ he said, ā€œand now that will no longer be a problem.ā€

Lifeline, celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, has served more than 2,000 people. That number will increase with the additional space. Also, programming and staffing can expand.

ā€œWhy are we doing this?ā€ Powless asked. ā€œBecause everyone knows someone affected by substance abuse. Six Kentuckians die every day from addiction! And we

Phase 1 Dormitory
Women’s Campus Chapel
(architectural rendering)

are turning away half the people who come to us to get sober because of limited space or staff.ā€

Executive director Ashley Miller, herself a 2014 graduate of Lifeline, said it is gratifying to see Lifeline growing with community support. ā€œLifeline changed my own life, and I am here to walk with others seeking to change theirs,ā€ she said.

Campaign gifts can include cash, outright or pledged over three years; gifts of stock; planned gifts such as life insurance policies or annuities; or qualified charitable distributions for people over 70 donating directly from a taxable IRA. Campaign gifts can be made at LifelineRecoveryCenter.org/campaign.

A CAMPAIGN FOR RECOVERY

WAYS TO GIVE

Your generosity will help others become whole. Through your charitable gifts, you will be living your faith and improving your community.

Cash

You can make an outright gift of cash, or pledge your support. Pledges can extend three years, and donations may be eligible for tax deductions.

Gifts of Stock

Stock, or other appreciated assets, may qualify for a charitable tax deduction. If the stock has appreciated in value, you may avoid paying capital gains upon transferring it to Lifeline.

Planned Gifts

You can create a meaningful Lifeline legacy through a planned gift. Planned giving options include bequests, charitable gift annuities, charitable remainder trusts, life insurance policies, retirement plans, or other arrangements.

Qualified Charitable Distribution

Individuals who are 70 1/2 and older can donate a maximum of $100,000 to Lifeline directly from a taxable IRA, instead of taking their required minimum distributions.

please contact: Ashley Miller, Executive Director amiller@lifelinerecoverycenter.org Phone 270-443-4743

COMMITTEE SEEKS DONATIONS FOR $13 MILLION CAPITAL CAMPAIGN

Meet the Campaign Committee

Lifeline has assembled a team of board members and community leaders to lead our $13 million campaign committee to build a new women’s campus and create an operating endowment. Thanks to these volunteers for their dedication to our future:

MISSY ECKENBERG

Campaign co-chair

Retired registered nurse/development professional

Lifeline board since 2020

ā€œI am helping Lifeline with this campaign because I have witnessed the physical effects and the spiritual bleakness that come from addiction. We are working to allow more people to have the opportunity to graduate from Lifeline and experience self-forgiveness, sobriety, employment, restoration of relationships, and a renewed faith in God.ā€

Executive director Ashley Miller with campaign committee member Jamey Brown.

need for treatment urgent. Lifeline’s accredited clinical program addresses root causes of addiction. Lifeline’s staff is compassionate and credentialed. And, most of all, Lifeline uses a faith-based approach to equip people to make life-lasting changes. There’s no better investment than that!ā€

JOHN A. WILLIAMS SR. Honorary Member

Founder Chairman Emeritus, Computer Services, Inc.

Affiliated with Lifeline since 2021

ā€œLifeline has proven a process that assists individuals to overcome addictive habits. Unfortunately, we are exposed to addiction on a regular basis, and thus it is so critical to have a service locally available to provide a solution.ā€

CARLA K. BERRY

STEVE POWLESS

Campaign co-chair

Retired CEO, CSI

Lifeline board chair since 2019

ā€œThere is truly no greater honor than to be a part of something that yields life-changing and life-saving outcomes. As I watch the amazing work at Lifeline, I am inspired by the miracles taking place daily. A successful campaign will enable Lifeline to continue and to expand its Christ-centered program for many years to come.ā€

DOREEN HAHN

Campaign honorary co-chair

Retired CPA

Affiliated with Lifeline since 2018

ā€œSubstance abuse is ravaging families, making the

Senior Vice President Business Development, Paducah Bank and Trust Co.

Lifeline board since 2023

ā€œThis campaign is very meaningful to me and my husband, John, because our son, Rob, passed away five years ago from a fentanyl overdose. I felt so very helpless and wanted to make a difference for other families going through the very same experience. I have been helping community organizations for 45 years; but when asked to join the Lifeline board, I knew this was my opportunity to honor Rob and help with the extraordinary group working tirelessly to raise funds for Lifeline. I truly feel that the key factor in the Lifeline culture is faith. The success stories are a celebration of life. Lifeline provides the guidance and tools to help our clients working so hard on their journey to sobriety.ā€œ

Missy Eckenberg and Steve Powless, Campaign Co-Chairs

JAMEY BROWN

Managing director and wealth management Advisor,

The Brown Wealth Management Group

ā€œMy family and I feel a deep responsibility to give back to our community; and we know addiction is present everywhere. I was first introduced to Lifeline through United Way Project United and later met Ashley Miller, hearing her story and getting to see lives changing right before our eyes. When I was approached to help with this campaign, it was the quickest yes I have ever given to a volunteer position. Their work is truly inspiring, and I am fortunate to be a small part of it.ā€

TERRY HAAS

CEO, Turnkey Risk Solutions

Lifeline board since 2021

ā€œIn the parable of the Prodigal Son, the father welcomed and helped his son for he was hungry. We are all called to do the same for those who come to us from a difficult journey.ā€

JEFF HOLLAND

Financial Advisor

ā€œAddiction is a terrible disease! Lifeline has been effective beyond any other treatment facility I am aware of, so I want to help support this ministry as they work to rebuild individuals, families and communities.ā€

KENNY HUNT

Developer/contractor

Lifeline board since 2017

ā€œThere are a lot of different opportunities to be involved in non-profits, but what attracted me to Lifeline was its story and the people. Ashley Miller, Terrye Peeler and Bob Hill asked for my help on facilities several years ago and I obliged, as I have for many organizations over the years. There was something different about these folks, something that made you want to help. I could see their passion and their drive to move Lifeline forward. They

dragged me in kicking, but I’m so glad they did!ā€

BILL JONES

Retired banker

ā€œI support Lifeline Recovery Center because addiction affects people from all walks of life. By contributing to this campaign, we can offer crucial support and resources to help individuals overcome addiction and rebuild their lives.ā€

MARTY NICHOLS

Banking/Senior Advisor

Affiliated with Lifeline since 2020

ā€œTreatments for various devastating diseases have varying success rates, depending on the disease and severity. In my opinion, Lifeline is the most organized and potentially successful treatment for the disease of addiction.ā€

TERRYE PEELER

Retired

Lifeline former director and current board member, since 2005

ā€œFrom the beginning of this journey with Lifeline, my prayer has always been to be able to help more men and women be free from addiction and to restore families. This campaign is helping make that possible now and for years to come.ā€

TODD TRIMBLE

Entrepreneur

Lifeline board member since 2019

ā€œI volunteered once many years ago to help Lifeline and immediately knew this was my charity – to strengthen our community by supporting those who need immediate help, based on faith in God. Many years ago, I set out to help change lives, and in the process, my own life was dramatically touched and changed by Lifeline Recovery Center.ā€

Kenny Hunt, Terrye Peeler, Todd Trimble, Jeff Holland
Bill Jones, Carla Berry, Doreen Hahn, Terry Haas

ANNUAL BANQUET

Lifeline friends raise $105k.

Almost 500 people at the June annual banquet contributed about $105,000 and celebrated ā€œ20 Years of Miracles: Changing Lives, Building a Bright Future.ā€ They applauded the personal stories of sobriety and our big announcement of a new women’s campus. We love these many faces of our community support!

Representatives from our partner, Ray & Kay Eckstein Charitable Trust, are among nearly 500 at the annual banquet in June.

Donations provide library for men’s campus ā€˜GOD PUT IT ALL TOGETHER’

In the aftermath of the tornado that devastated Mayfield and nearby areas in December 2021, the men at Lifeline became involved in relief efforts. Their work has resulted in a lasting boost for their own campus – a library.

Volunteer Jennifer Ellington met Lifeline clients as they sorted clothing and stored furniture donations after the tornado. They often told her how they wanted devotions for their own study. Last Christmas, one of them told her he’d like to have a concordance, a reference book listing words and phrases found in the Bible.

ā€œYou want a concordance?ā€ she asked. ā€œWhy don’t we just get you a whole library?ā€

Jennifer, a first-grade teacher at Lone Oak Elementary who has devoted 20 years to education, began spreading the word among her social media friends that she needed Bibles, Christian help books and scriptural study books.

The result has literally filled a room. ā€œSomeone gave us some bookshelves and some furniture. God put it all together,ā€ she said, ā€œand we have a beautiful library for their spiritual growth.ā€

As she worked with Lifeline staff and clients, she also helped organize a seating area in the cafeteria, a men’s clothing bank and even the entry to the chapel on the Ballard County campus.

Lifeline staff said the clients appreciate the reading materials. ā€œThe library enhances the overall treatment experience, providing the men a sanctuary that feels less clinical and more conducive to relaxation and personal growth,ā€ he said.

Jennifer and Lifeline staff continue to collaborate.

ā€œAt the end of the day, we strive to enhance our overall program experience to improve the quality of services we provide,ā€ he said.

While Lifeline is committed to raising money for facilities and staff, Jennifer said she is excited to bring these extras to the clients.

ā€œWhen they walk in, they come in depressed, beaten,ā€ she said. ā€œThey see these special items for them, and they say, ā€˜This is awesome, I feel like I don’t deserve this,’ but we tell them, it’s a way to brighten their journey and to show God’s love for them.ā€

People wishing to donate items may find their wish lists on Amazon.

Comfortable furniture and books donated to men’s library.
Jennifer Ellington, Lifeline volunteer

NORMALCY, WONDERFUL NORMALCY

Addicted mother could not dream of a normal life, until Lifeline treatment

LaDonna Cornwell’s life is pretty normal, like that of many 40-year-old single working moms with two kids. Isn’t it wonderful?

The normalcy of a 9-to-5 job, an apartment with her family and a car seemed out of reach for LaDonna until this year.

For LaDonna, it’s more than normal, it’s a miracle.

Until graduating from Lifeline in late 2023, she never let herself dream of such a life. Since her late teens, she had been in and out of jail, addicted to meth and alcohol. Relationships had ended badly, and social workers monitored her children until she completely lost custody. She was often homeless, except when she lived with her drug dealer.

The last time she was in jail, she resolved to do something differently.

ā€œI pleaded for help,ā€ she said. ā€œI begged my parole officer to send me to Lifeline because I had heard about it from other girls in jail.ā€

She had tried rehab twice before, but she knew Lifeline was different with its spiritual emphasis during treatment. ā€œI was ready for God in my life,ā€ she said.

ā€œI was tired of disappointing my family, my kids, myself. The pattern had not changed, and I was

in a dark spot,ā€ she said. ā€œAlcohol had taken over. I slept with my bottle, and the first thing I did the next morning was go to the store to buy another bottle.ā€

She went straight through the three phases of treatment at Lifeline and was ready to leave after nine months. ā€œBut every day I was there, I woke up grateful. Other girls were counting their days til they could get out, not me. I was taking that time to work on me.ā€

LaDonna began working at Dippin’ Dots while at Lifeline and continues today full-time.

Holly Wilson, HR manager, said the company has employed Lifeline clients for about five years. The clients start during their second phase of treatment, and many, like LaDonna, stay even after they leave Lifeline.

Holly said the company began the partnership with Lifeline because she had a family member who suffered from addiction and was impressed with Lifeline’s program. ā€œWe get wonderful workers from Lifeline,ā€ she said.

Like LaDonna.

Since starting her job, LaDonna was able to buy a used car from her beloved sponsor, Lifeline founder Terrye Peeler, and she got her boys back in May.

ā€œI am blessed and grateful at how much I’ve gained,ā€ she said. ā€œI had no hope of getting my kids back, but God’s hand has been in that. My oldest son had doubt (because of their past), but they see I’ve changed. They have hope now.ā€

LaDonna Cornwell, 2023 graduate
LaDonna with sponsor, Terrye Peeler

PAINFUL RELAPSE, SWEET RECOVERY

When

sobriety faltered, Payton found success with God’s help at

Lifeline

From football and rap music to golf course maintenance and addiction counseling, Travis Payton has experienced a lot of life in his 42 years. Originally from Memphis, Travis was first sober in 2009 following an 18-month treatment program in Jackson, Tenn.

Travis had landed there at 27, a 10-year addict after a football injury ended his sports career. After football, he built a successful career in rap music, but it fostered the lifestyle of alcohol and drugs. ā€œAnd, after I had children, I didn’t want to send the wrong message to them,ā€ he said. He went into treatment and then worked in a rehab center for five years.

All was well until a painful breakup and COVID isolation put him back on the wrong track. ā€œI had been sober 13 years,ā€ he said, ā€œbut I got down on myself and started drinking again and went right back to that old lifestyle.ā€

He went into treatment again and eventually found his way to Lifeline in 2023. He stayed 15 months, including time in transitional living after he graduated in early 2024. ā€œI took time to figure out what I was going to do,ā€ he said. ā€œI listened to God.ā€

Travis has found his way in two arenas – golf course maintenance at Rolling Hills Country Club, where he enjoys the outdoor work in the tradition of his family’s lawn care business; and as a recovery associate at Lifeline, working with Lifeline residents. He shares his story with the clients and continues to go to AA meetings with Lifeline friends.

He credits two factors with his recovery – his family and his relationship with God.

ā€œI have a great family,ā€ he said. ā€œI strive to have the same morals and values that my great-grandfather instilled in me. I want to be that kind of man.ā€

Lifeline’s emphasis on faith turned out to be the difference from his previous experience with rehab

centers. ā€œLifeline gave me the opportunity to build a good foundation with God,ā€ he said. ā€œBefore I got there, my relationship with God was not what I wanted it to be, but I didn’t realize it. Every time I’d have difficulties, it would be me veering away from God and it wouldn’t work out very well.ā€

His experiences have taught him some hard, but important lessons.

ā€œNo matter what I was dealing with, I thought drugs and alcohol would fix it,ā€ he said. ā€œI made terrible decisions, but now, with God, I’m living proof that if a person wants to change, you can do it.ā€

Travis Payton, 2024 graduate

THANK YOU TO OUR 2024 DONORS

JANUARY 1 - SEPTEMBER 30, 2024

The following donors made gifts to Lifeline Recovery Center in 2024 between January 1 - September 30. Your generosity is helping to change lives and transform communities and we are so very thankful for your support.

Gifts of $25,000 or more

Ballard County Fiscal Court

Scott & Carol Berryman

Susan & Ed Bredniak

Carson-Myre Charitable Foundation Trust

Dairyman’s Supply Co., Inc.

Stan & Missy Eckenberg

Ray & Kay Eckstein Charitable Trust

Wayne & Sherry Golightly

Bill & Teresa Jones

Frank & Marisa Matire

Terrye & Glenn Peeler

Steve & Nancy Powless

Kenny & Nicki Roof

Rudolph’s Inc.

Meredith Schroeder

Charlie & Linda Shields

Jeff & Heather Taylor, MD

United Way of Western Kentucky

Robert & Susan Walker

Gifts of $10,000- 24,999

Dr. Jay & Jen Brien

David & Peggy Culbertson

Richard & Janice Fairhurst Jr.

Faith Center of Paducah

Kim & Keith Jones

Todd & Pam Trimble

Gifts of $5,000- 9,999

Anonymous (1)

David & Jan Bailey

FNB Bank, Inc.

Mike Gourley

Terry & Laura Haas

Doreen & Bruce Hahn

Heartland Church

Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonel

Ken & Beth Hunt

Barbara W McGinty

Brad & Nancy Moore

Neil’s Catering

Sharon Pegram

Meredith Schroeder

Jason & Leigh Ann Siener

Sutton Investment & Retirement Partners

Gifts of $2,500 - 4,999

AAA Stowaway

John & Carla Berry

Jennifer Coursey

Marshall W. Davis Drugs, Inc.

Grace Fellowship Church

Chuck & Cindy Hall

Immanuel Baptist Church

Joppa Missionary Baptist Church

Rick & Lynn Loyd

Nesbitt’s Docks & Lifts

Edward & Teresa Nichols

Purchase Ear Technology

Rosebower Baptist Church

Wayne & Mary Upshaw

Landen & Van Meeks

Gifts of $1,000- 2,499

Bacon Farmer Workman Engineering & Testing

Baptist Health System Services

Teresa & Ron Beavers

Kent Beckman

Jason and Becky Bell

Rev. Dr. Bernice Belt

Bethel Christian Church

BrantleyFamilyCharitableFund

Erin&CaseyBrantley,MD

JohnBrazzell,MD

BrookportChurchofGod

James&BrendaBrown

BryantLawCenter

TonyCopeland

ConstantineCurris

EastBaptistChurch

FirstBaptistChurch

Cade&CallieFoster

Kevin&JenniferGaunce

William&SusanGilland

BrandonHall

H.T.HackneyCompany

RevaHarper

Jeff&TerriHolland

HutsonInc.

IndependenceBank

Wayne&CindyJones

LeeperFamilyFoundation

Kerry&MelindaLynn

M&PRemodeling

MassacUnitedMethodistChurch

MercyHealth

Michael&LynnMeridith

Sally&LouisMichelson

NewHopeMissionaryBaptistChurch

NewLifeAssociates,Inc.

NewtonCreekBaptistChurch

PaducahBank&TrustCompany

PryorsburgBaptistChurch

JenniferQuillen

GregRoberts

Robertson-HillInc.

RotaryClub

Darrin&MarieRudolph

SanctuaryChurchofGod

Bonnie&FletcherSchrock

SignetFederalCreditUnion

Kathy&KinneySlaughter

R.B.&D.B.Trigg

TwelveOaksBaptistChurch

Bill&JoanieWalden

Williams,Williams&Lentz

Lee&LaVonnaWillingham

PatrickWithrow,MD

Giftsof$500-999

RobertW.Baird&Company,Inc.

BandanaCommunityChurch

CharitiesAidFoundationofAmerica

Andrew&HaleyCollins

CommunityChristianChurch

ConcordUnitedMethodistWomen

TrentonDierkes

DanDonaldson

FellowshipofChristianAthletes

FreeSpiritMotorcycleMinistry

John&JanetFoster

GospelMissionWorshipCenter

GraceBaptistChurch

LeslieHeath

Daniel&KeishaHopkins

Jim&DeniseHumphreys

I5DesignGroup,Inc.

InnovativeOphthalmology

Bruce&JeannaKimbell

KathrynLankton

Marquette Transportation Company, LLC

Olivet Baptist Church

Cameron Taleban

Pat Ellen Thompson

Gifts of $1- 499

3 C’s Concrete Work, LLC

Elizabeth Adams

Alpha Delta Kappa Lambda Chapter

American Online Giving Foundation

Cindy Bailey

Bandana United Methodist Church

Timothy & Cheryle Barenie

Wayne & Jo Ann Belt

Carl & Elaine Bivin

Blue Horizon Travel

Charlie Brantley

Randy & Carla Bridges

William Brigance, MD

Rodney & Debbie Bushong

Cynthia Carden

CFSB

Charitable Aid Foundation America

Christian Fellowship Church

Community Life Church

Larry & Carol Conway

John & Teresa Crowder

Naomi Dawson

Mason DeJarnett

Hunter DeMumbree

Jennifer DeMumbree

Janette Edwards

Nicole Edwards

David & Debbie Etheridge

Chris Evans

Robert & Lauri Ezell

Fairways Management dba Paxton Park

Faith Life Class

First Assembly of God

John & Janet Foster

Four Rivers Nuclear Partnership

Chris & Emily Garrison

Angie & Charley Glisson

Don & Patti Gregory

Herb & Doris Gregory

Ricki Goode

Ronald Goode

Bob Hill

Nathan & McKell Hillebrand

Robert & Carla Hobgood

Heather Jackson

William & Kelly Johnson

Tyler & Olivia Jones

Kelso Electric, LLC.

Greg Kingston, MD

Penny Knott

Robert Kent & Sheila Koster

Kroger Community Rewards

Labor of Love, Inc.

Dawn Lamb

Gerren & Crystal Lawson

Randy Lee

Tucker Lee

Jesse Lipson

Little Tractor & Equipment LLC

Give Lively

David & Sandra Massey

Larry & Mitzi Mason

Ronald Mays

Bradley & Brenda McElroy

Larry & Mary McIntosh

Ronald Mays

Madeline McIntosh

Beverly Meeks

Milner & Orr Funeral Home

Mt. Zion Baptist Church

Snookie Oglesby

Foster Pearson

Sara Pickard

Dona Rains & Joe Tarantino

Tony & Cheryl Raspberry

Larry & Karen Reichart

Robert & Nancy Reynolds

Greg & Traci Rodulfo

Nicole Rooyakkers

Tommy Joe Rothrock

Craig & Susan Rothwell

Matt Rule

Buddy & Ann Rushing

Allan & Nancy Sanders

James Sexton

Robert Simpson

Karen Smith

Robert & Jane Smith

Matt & Keisha Snow

Charles & Brenda Spees

Lucas Stinnett

Larry & Cynthia Swope

Janel Tate

Otis & Melissa Thaxton

Glen & Linda Titsworth

Trace Creek Missionary Baptist Church

United Way of Greater Milwaukee & Waukesha Co.

Joe & Tamarah Vance

Tom & Anita Vance

Michael & Debra Walker

Clay Wallace

Norman & Patricia Wallace

Waterfront Services Inc.

Anita Williams

Williams Heating & Air Inc.

Marlen Wood

Woodmen Life- Chapter 2

Jason Woods

Steven Wright

Marianne Yontz

Eric Ziegler

Business Donors

3 C’s Concrete Work, LLC

AAA Stowaway

Alpha Delta Kappa Lambda Chapter

American Online Giving Foundation

Bacon Farmer Workman Engineering & Testing

Robert W. Baird & Company, Inc.

Ballard County Fiscal Court

Baptist Health System Services

Blue Horizon Travel

Bryant Law Center

Carson-Myre Charitable Foundation Trust

Charitable Aid Foundation of America

CFSB

Dairyman’s Supply Co., Inc.

Marshall W. Davis Drugs, Inc.

Edward Jones, Inc.

Fairways Management dba Paxton Park

Fellowship of Christian Athletes

FNB Bank, Inc.

Four Rivers Nuclear Partnership

Gipson Farms, LLC

Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonel

H.T. Hackney Company

Hutson Inc.

I5 Design Group, Inc.

Independence Bank

Innovative Ophthalmology

Kelso Electric, LLC.

Kroger Community Rewards

Labor of Love, Inc.

Leeper Family Foundation

Little Tractor & Equipment LLC

M&P Remodeling

Marquette Transportation Company, LLC

Mercy Health

Milner & Orr Funeral Home

Neil’s Catering

Nesbitt’s Dock & Lifts

New Life Associates, Inc.

Paducah Bank & Trust Company

Purchase Ear Technology

Robertson Hill, Inc.

Rotary Club

Rudolph’s Inc.

Signet Federal Credit Union

Sutton Investment & Retirement Partners

United Way of Greater Milwaukee & Waukesha Co.

United Way of Western Kentucky

Waterfront Services, Inc.

Williams Heating & Air Inc.

Williams, Williams & Lentz

Woodmen Life- Chapter 2

Church Donors

Bandana Community Church

Bandana United Methodist

Bethel Cumberland Christian Church

Bethel Christian Church

Brookport Church of God

Christian Fellowship Church

Community Christian Church

Community Life Church

Concord United Methodist Women

East Baptist Church

Faith Center of Paducah

Faith Life Class

First Assembly of God

First Baptist Church

Free Spirit Motorcycle Ministry

Gospel Mission Worship Center

Grace Baptist Church

Grace Fellowship Church Heartland

2023 AUDITED FINANCIALS

P.O. Box 7652 Paducah, KY 42002

JOIN US THIS FALL!

* Women’s campus groundbreaking, 2 p.m. Nov. 11, 8650 Old Hwy. 60

* Graduation, 4:30 p.m., Nov. 16, Lone Oak First Baptist Church

Lifeline Recovery Center Board of Directors

Steve Powless, Board Chair

Ashley Miller, Executive Director

Dr. Jeffrey Taylor, Treasurer

Rev. Dr. Bernice Belt, Secretary

David Bailey

Carla Berry

Dr. Casey Brantley

Tony Copeland

Missy Eckenberg

Terry Haas

Robert L. Hill

Ken Hunt

Bonnie Shrock

Matt Snow

Todd Trimble

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Fall 2024 Lifeline Publication by lifelinerecoverycenter.org - Issuu