Below is a copy of letter from a special worker at Fellowship Services in
the World Service Office (NAWS) concerning
verification attendance cards and court cards in NA meetings.
It has good guidance for how PI committees and groups can deal
with the effects of signing these cards.
NAWS Response Letter
Dear Friend,
Your
letter asking about verification attendance cards and court cards in
NA meetings has been received. Below, we’ve included some general
information about them as you requested. Also enclosed, is an
article from NAWS Annual Report, June 1999, entitled “Drug
Courts: A Public Information Success Story”. All of this
information should be helpful to your group in reaching a decision
about accommodating people from either a drug court program or a
treatment center who are requesting verification of their attendance
at an NA meeting.
Over the
past several years, NA at the local, regional, and world levels has
been making a concerted effort to improve our public image. This has
been done by informing government agencies and the public, including
drug courts, about who and what we are, and that NA is a viable
method of recovery from the disease of addiction. Our experience is
that drug courts are a valuable resource for addicts and they often
help addicts find NA. When drug courts, any other part of the
judicial system, or treatment centers send addicts to open or closed
NA meetings, we can view it as an opportunity to carry our message
of recovery. Most NA meetings do make provisions for signing court
cards, but some do not. It’s up to each individual meeting to
decide.
When
problems do occur, they are almost always the result of a lack of
information. Most often, drug court officers don’t really know: what
open or closed NA meetings are; how the court can utilize NA
meetings in their work; what happens in an NA meeting; the
importance of confidentiality and anonymity in our meetings; or that
we do not report on a person’s recovery or what they say in a
meeting. In these cases, we try to provide accurate information to
court officials about what NA is and is not and what our practices
and principles are. In each case where problems occurred, they were
remedied by a willing NA service committee that met with the
appropriate court officials a few times and provided this
information.
We
cooperate with court officials by informing them about the location
of NA meetings, our reliance on anonymity, and the importance of
maintaining our independence from courts and government agencies. We
also let them know that a decision to sign cards may vary from
meeting to meeting, and a signed card only means that the individual
showed up at the NA meeting. Your area service committee may want to
ask the H&I and PI subcommittees to work together in contacting the
probation and parole departments to discuss NA, our traditions, and
what we do. It is extremely beneficial to help them understand that
a signed court card means only that a person attended that NA
meeting and that we do not assume responsibility for their recovery.
As an
example, anonymity in NA meetings is something we ask everyone to
respect, including drug courts. But, sometimes court officials don’t
fully understand the role anonymity plays in NA. In these cases, our
PI committees can visit these officials and explain that we ask all
people who attend an NA meeting to respect the anonymity of others
and not to repeat what someone shares in a meeting. It helps so much
when we explain that addicts rely on an atmosphere that is safe from
public disclosure in NA meetings, and that if we don’t respect
everyone’s anonymity then addicts won’t want to seek recovery in NA.
After this kind of education and discussion, we normally receive
full cooperation from drug court officials because they know what is
reasonable to expect.
It is
helpful to remember that our purpose remains the same no matter why
an addict comes to our meetings – to carry the message to addicts.
Our literature states "We are not interested in what or how much you
used, what you have done in the past, how much or how little you
have, only in what you want to do about your problem and how we can
help." Our Third Tradition states that the only requirement for
membership is a desire to stop using. So, when someone chooses to
come to an NA meeting, it is not up to us to decide whether or not
his or her motivation is acceptable. Many of our members made it to
NA through encouragement from our jobs, families, or the legal
system.
We do know that it is common practice in most
areas of our fellowship for these cards to be signed. There is
nothing in the traditions to prohibit any member from simply signing
these cards for individuals who want them signed. It is not an
endorsement of an outside enterprise nor an affiliation with a
government agency to sign cards for people who have been directed to
attend our meetings. It is simply one of the ways that many NA
members and meetings cooperate with potential members and carry the
message of recovery to addicts. Our members do not attest to
anyone’s state of recovery, perform urine tests, or verify clean
dates. However, if the individual wants to verify his own attendance
at an NA meeting, we can cooperate with him by signing his card.
When
individuals ask that their court card be signed, usually the meeting
secretary or some other group officer is glad to sign it at the end
of the meeting. The most common method used by NA groups is to ask
that anyone with a court card place it in the Seventh Tradition
basket as it is passed. They are then informed that these cards will
be signed and available for them to pick up at the end of the
meeting. Most NA members sign cards with their first name and last
initial. If the secretary, treasurer or group leader is
uncomfortable with signing their first name and last initial, they
have the option of only writing the name, date and time of the
meeting. Another option that has been used is for the group to have
a group stamp made up, and simply to stamp the card so that no one
individual needs to sign it.
If the
group makes the decision that it definitely does not want to sign
court cards, then this should be announced at the beginning of each
meeting so anyone in attendance with a court card has the option of
looking for another meeting where cards are signed.
I hope
this information is helpful to you. We send you our best wishes and
thanks for writing to NA World Services.
In
fellowship,
(Signed by special worker)
WSO
Fellowship Services
Encl:
NAWS Drug Court article
For a plain text version of this article, click
here.
For a PDF file of this article, click
here.
For a Rich Text Version of this article, click
here.
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