• Meet Our Team
  • Advertise on SCDN
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Contact Us
Wednesday, December 17
Scioto County Daily News
  • Login
  • Register
Subscribe For $1/week
  • Public Safety

    Midnight Meltdowns to Daylight Distress: Deputies Handle Mental Health Crises Across Scioto County 

    Shooting threats gun threat

    Man Claims Stranger Threatened Him With Gun, Deputies Search Friendship Area 

    Troubled Bad Youth Kids

    Portsmouth Officers Spend Monday on the Front Lines With Troubled Teens 

    Scioto County Grand Jury Indictments

    20 New Scioto County Grand Jury Indictments

    Attempted Murder Indictment Filed in Minford Roadside Assault Case

    Busted Arrests Portsmouth Scioto County Mugshots

    Busted! 12/16/25 New Arrests in Portsmouth, Ohio – Scioto County Mugshots

    Kevin Loop

    Repeat Offender Busted For Domestic Violence 

    Royal Inn

    Indecent Exposure at the Royal Inn 

    Wrong Way, Wrong City: Confused Driver Found Before Dawn 

    SCDN File Photo

    Grandpa’s Worst Nightmare: Kid Finds Toy Handcuffs, Locks Himself Up 

    police investigation

    Mom Reports Disturbing Claim From Child: Deputies Open Investigation 

    Baby co-sleeping

    “Never Okay”: First Responders Beg Parents Not to Sleep With Their Babies 

    Busted Arrests Portsmouth Scioto County Mugshots

    Busted! 12/15/25 New Arrests in Portsmouth, Ohio – Scioto County Mugshots

    McDonalds

    Crash, Boom, Bang at McDonald’s: Breakfast Turns Into Bumper Cars

    sheriff cruiser 23

    Tempers Flare on Gallia: Ex’s Parking Lot Blowup Has Employees on Edge

    Death Threat

    Deputies Investigate Student Threat “I’m Gonna Kill You!” 

    CPS

    Pot Panic Before a CPS Visit: Police Called to Calm Nerves, Check on Child 

    SCDN File Photo

    Man Tries to Hop Into ODOT Truck at Tim Hortons 

    homeless

    Dumpsters, Drop-In Centers, and Condemned Homes: A Snapshot of Portsmouth’s Growing Homeless Crisis 

    Dropped at the Gas Station, Again: When “Problem Calls” Become Speedway’s Problem

  • Lawrence County
  • Politics
    Cathy Coleman

    Commissioners Honor Cathy Coleman With Heartfelt Christmas Tribute as Scioto County Celebrates the Season 

    Robert Horton

    UPDATE: Horton Case Delayed… Again 

    Scioto County Board of Commissioners

    Full House: Commissioner Will Mault Takes His Seat at the Table 

    Scioto County Courthouse

    What’s Next for Scioto County Commissioners? Two Interim Members, One Uncertain Future

    Will Mault

    Back to Three: Will Mault Chosen as Interim Scioto County Commissioner 

    GOP to Pick Interim Commissioner to Fill Bryan Davis Vacancy 

    Scioto County

    Voters Show Strong Support for Most Local Levies — But Sheriff’s Backed Measures Fall Short in Two Townships 

    David Malone

    Malone Unseats Dunne: Portsmouth’s Political Firebrand Loses His Seat 

    Latest Updates: Bryan Davis Gets Bail Modification, Next Hearing Set for December

    Portsmouth City Bonds

    Portsmouth Moves Forward With Bonds to Fund New City Building 

    Democrats Blast Bryan Davis: “Quit Collecting a Paycheck You’re Not Earning” 

    Robert Horton

    Update in Robert Horton Corruption Case 

    Davis Commish

    No Updates, Just an Empty Seat: Powell and Smith Say Davis Drama is Out of Their Hands

    weird strange absurd

    Parking, Murals, and an Indicted Commissioner: Sparks Fly at Portsmouth City Manager’s Conference 

    Bryan Davis Due Back In Court October 21 

    Sean Dunne Next Mayor of Portsmouth?

    Dunne: “It’s Time for Portsmouth to Speak Up” on Davis Resignation 

    confused woman

    Portsmouth Council Weighs Asking Davis to Resign 

    Turning Point USA

    Student Democrats Deny Role in Petition to Ban Turning Point USA at SSU 

    Turning Point USA

    Portsmouth Politics Escalate: SSU Students Petition to Ban Turning Point USA

    Recorder Gary Jenkins

    Scioto County Recorder’s Office Increases Fees 

  • Feel Good
    Steve Hayes

    Scioto County Declares December 11 “Steve Hayes Day,” Honoring a Radio Legend After Nearly Six Decades on the Air 

    A silver thermal pouch sits alone on a white and gray background. The top of the bag is cut open.

    How To Choose the Right Closure for Thermal Pouches

    sending flowers to Japan

    Flower Delivery: Share Scioto’s Heart with Japan

    Honoring Scioto County’s First Town — and Its First People: New Heritage Trail Sign Dedicated at Earl Thomas Conley Park 

    A man approaching the bowling lane with a red bowling ball as his three friends in the background cheer him on.

    How Bowling Can Improve Your Mental Health

    A sleek blue sedan parked on concrete. Behind the vehicle is a view of the sky with a setting sun over a body of water.

    How To Make Your Daily Driver Feel Like a Sports Car

    A person's hand is holding a miniature wooden house with a green roof and a budding plant on top against a green background.

    How To Reduce Your Carbon Footprint at Home

    A man sitting in a vehicle is handing over an ID card to a female police officer standing by his window.

    Tips for Staying Calm During Police Encounters

    Cyn Mackley

    Cyn Mackley Channels Haunted Appalachia

    A group of friends stand around a table, smiling, laughing, and drinking. There are plates of food on the table.

    Creative Ways To Host Outdoor Events This Summer

    A family of two parents and a young boy and girl are playing laser tag with vests and laser blasters in an arena.

    What Activities To Offer at a Family Fun Center

    Shawnee State University SSU

    Shawnee State University Joins New Athletic Conference, Adds Football to Lineup 

    BREAKING: Commissioners Make Shocking Decision—Halloween to Remain on Halloween 

    Escape to the Hills: A Summer Reading List Set in Appalachia 

    Scioto County Champs: Lady Trojans and Word Wizards Bring Home the Gold 

    “I Held Those Keys Tight” — One Man’s Harrowing Journey from Addiction to Hope 

    Three girls in quinceañera dresses stand beside one another. The one in middle has a gold dress while the other two wear pink.

    Tips for Selecting the Color of a Quinceañera Dress

    The Day the Streak Ended: Lakers’ 1987 Record Broken

    An angler standing at the edge of a lake just after sunset with three fishing rods resting on the ground next to him.

    Night Fishing: Who Is It for and How Do You Start?

    good cops

    Cops Rescue Lost Man 

  • Obituaries
    Ruth (Kelso) Eckstein

    Ruth Eckstein 100 of Portsmouth

    Dwight McNutt

    Dwight Edward McNutt

    Craddock B. Frye

    Craddock B. Frye, 87 of West Portsmouth

    Marcella Jane McGraw

    Marcella Jane McGraw, age 84, of Lucasville

    Janie M Newton, 82 of Waverly

    Jason Lee Spencer

    Jason Lee Spencer, 45 of Lucasville

     Sharon Elaine Kimbler

     Sharon Elaine Kimbler 75 of Portsmouth

    Screenshot

    Gary Curtis Angel, 80 of Vanceburg

    Paul David Harris

    Paul David Harris, 74 of Wheelersburg

    Kenneth Edward Green

    Kenneth Edward Green, 93 of West Portsmouth

    Donald Raymond Milstead

    Donald Raymond Milstead, 92 of West Portsmouth

    Robert Lee Stanley, Jr

    Robert Lee Stanley, Jr., 72 of Waverly

    Marcella Ann Webb

    Marcella Ann Webb, 79 of Portsmouth

    Lester Gilbert Howell III

    Lester Gilbert Howell III, 74 of South Shore

    James Noble

    James Noble, 79 of Minford

    Roy Allen Yopp 86 of South Shore

    Stephen Dale Reed

    Stephen Dale Reed, 89 of Rubyville,

    Jaidon Timothy Michael Tackett 14 of Waverly

    Jaidon Timothy Michael Tackett

    Jaidon Timothy Michael Tackett, 14, of Waverly

    Donald Ray Veach JR

    Donald Ray Veach JR, 62 of Quincy

  • More News
    • All News
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Education
    • Economy
    • Food & Drinks
    • Local Business
    • National
    • Opinion
    • Regional
    • Strange But True
    • Trending
No Result
View All Result
Scioto County Daily News
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
Scioto County Daily News
No Result
View All Result

From a Beacon of Despair to a Beacon of Hope

Cyn Mackley by Cyn Mackley
5 years ago
in Local Business
From a Beacon of Despair to a Beacon of Hope
ShareTweetEmail

From a beacon of despair to a beacon of hope. A new $25 million project could not only change the way the world views Portsmouth and Scioto County but life a generation of people living here out of addiction and poverty.  Scioto County Daily News has the exclusive story of the biggest economic development story this area has seen in the past year a decade. But more than that, a story of a revolution that could save lives here and across the country. 

Here’s a quote from our interview that stuck out to me. “We’re not waiting for someone to come in and build it for us. No one’s coming to do that. The government’s not coming to do it. We have a lot of problems in this town that we have to fix ourselves.” 

Let’s start at the beginning. 

RELATED POSTS

Midnight Meltdowns to Daylight Distress: Deputies Handle Mental Health Crises Across Scioto County 

20 New Scioto County Grand Jury Indictments

Attempted Murder Indictment Filed in Minford Roadside Assault Case

Symbol of Despair

At one time, the old Williams Shoe Factory (later the Mitchellace Factory) was a symbol of Portsmouth’s status as the shoe manufacturing capital of the country. Our grandparents and parents worked there during the boom days of manufacturing in Scioto County. 

As jobs moved overseas and opioids moved in, it became a symbol of something else. Scioto County became known as the capital of pill mills. The birthplace of the opioid epidemic.  As news crews rolled into town to cover our misery, the run-down factory made a great visual. A symbol of our despair. A symbol of a glorious past that was long gone and replaced by addiction, poverty, and misery.   

Even when Sole Choice moved in and used part of the facility, the abandoned factory was still the photo the Associated Press provided TV stations and Newspapers as an image for Portsmouth, Ohio.  

Now, what had become a beacon of despair is a beacon of hope. 

Treatment Revolution

The non-profit Counseling Center has served those struggling with alcohol and addiction in our area for 40 years.  They’re used to the process of rehabilitation. Now the dedicated staff will be taking on a rehabilitation project like nothing they’ve ever seen before. The plan is to turn a run-down factory building into a gleaming state-of-the-art behavioral health facility that treats addiction as a health issue.

Counseling Center CEO, Andy Albrecht says, “The best way to wrap your mind around it is that it’s set up much like a hospital. If you think about a hospital, you can get everything from a cup of coffee at a food court to major surgery.”  

Albrecht says the facility will offer the full range of inpatient and outpatient services.  The Counseling Center offers most of these programs now, but they are spread out among several locations. The 250-bed facility will offer services like

  • Withdrawal management
  • Residental treatment with separate floors for men, women, and women with children
  • Medical services
  • Intensive outpatient services
  • Health and wellness aftercare
  • Vocational care

Albrecht said, “It’s an opportunity to coordinate it under one roof. It will be services for people who haven’t even had one day of sobriety yet. Crisis intervention services, opioid response teams that get dispersed if someone overdoses.  Intensive outpatient services. Inpatient services. All the way to the very backend of treatment. Our treatment model is to provide services from not having one day of sobriety to having one year and more. The longer someone stays engaged in treatment the better the outcome is.”

Focusing on the Big Picture

Albrecht says that treatment for addicts has often been piecemeal, focusing on one problem at a time and not the big picture. “When you look at this facility. The first thing I think of is healthcare. This is how you treat addiction in a healthcare model. We’ve been a little bit jaded out in the community because we’ve seen an explosion of drug and alcohol treatment centers. A lot of those facilities just focus on what part of the continuum.” 

Bill Dever, an executive,  for The Counseling Center, agrees. He says to expect to see some big changes in the rehab game soon. “Expect more regulation. Health facilities have to operate in a certain way. You wouldn’t be able to perform heart surgery and kick somebody out on the street and say’ good luck recovering.’  You’re going to see more and more regulation.  We think we’re ahead of the curve on it.

 

1 of 5
- +
Counseling Center plans Campus
Counseling Center plans Campus
Counseling Center plans Campus
Counseling Center plans Campus
The Counseling Center Unveils Plans For New Campus In The East End

Lift An Entire Generation Out of Poverty

Some taxpayers may wonder if the facility is a good use of dollars. Bill Dever says he gets their concerns. “When you see the amount of money that is spent on drug and alcohol counseling locally, what you see is a really inefficient spending of money. That’s why you see a treatment center on every corner. They’re relatively easy to start. There’s a lot of taxpayer money going to support drug and alcohol treatment. As one of the only non-profit drug and alcohol treatment centers in the area, and the biggest, we feel we have the duty to use the money efficiently and wisely.  If I’m a citizen, I’m saying what are you doing using my tax money? I understand that.”

Combining all of the treatment options in one building will not only improve efficiency, but it will also save $6 million a year in treatment costs.” We will be able to provide more service and more quality service for less money. This model will be the new model in the state of Ohio.”

Job Training Key

But it’s about more than saving money. Successfully rehabilitating individuals can lead to rehabilitating our community. That’s why the new facility will have a heavy focus on job training.

Andy Albrecht says, “We’re going to have a pretty robust vocational program and job training center. A career center for people in recovery. People in recovery have all sorts of different barriers, whether it be a criminal background or no driver’s license There’s a whole host of barriers people face in early recovery. The career center will really hone in on that.”

Please Support This Local Business

Dever says the vocational training is key, “If clients are getting employed, staying sober – your crime rates go down. Property values go back up. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, it’s a model to lift a generation of people out of poverty.  We’re interested in taking a population of people, getting them a job, a house, getting them healthy. Everybody wins. If we do our mission right, everybody wins. Whether you have a loved one who is addicted or not.  Whether they know it or not.”  

Millions in Revenue Generated

And before you ask, the taxpayer money allocated for the project can’t be spent somewhere else to patch roads or hire police officers. Funds are designated for specific purposes. 

So how much revenue can you expect this project to generate?

  • $20 to $25 million for building rehabilitation
  • $50 million in economic development expected in the East End
  • $18 million in payroll for 375 full-time jobs with benefits

That doesn’t even consider the amount of money generated when an addict stops being a burden on taxpayers to keep in jail or on assistance and becomes a tax-paying member of society.

Albrecht says neighbors don’t need to worry about security. The facility will have 24-hour security and the residential facilities will be supervised 24 hours a day as well.

They also wanted to clarify that this facility has nothing to do with the closure of OLBH. It’s been in the works for years.  And no worries for Sole Choice either. The company is moving locations.

The symbolism of using the factory is not lost on Albrecht. “It’s such an iconic building. To be able to turn it into something that can impact a generation of individuals.”

While there’s an old saying that the two things people hate are change and the way things are, Dever is ready to get radical, ”We’ve got a plan. We’ve got a dream. We execute that in kind of a militant fashion. We’re not waiting for someone to come in and build it for us. No one’s coming to do that. The government’s not coming to do it. We have a lot of problems in this town that we have to fix ourselves. This is a model that’s going to go a long way in aiding that.”.

From a beacon of despair to a beacon of hope From a beacon of despair to a beacon of hope From a beacon of despair to a beacon of hope



Tags: economyFeaturedHealthNewsletteropioid crisisPortsmouth Ohio
Please Support This Local Business

TRENDING NOW

Busted Arrests Portsmouth Scioto County Mugshots

Busted! 12/11/25 New Arrests in Portsmouth, Ohio – Scioto County Mugshots

December 11, 2025
Jaidon Timothy Michael Tackett

Jaidon Timothy Michael Tackett, 14, of Waverly

December 11, 2025
Ohio House Bill 58

Unaccredited Recovery Housing Shut Down in Portsmouth as State Cracks Down with Ohio House Bill 58 

December 10, 2025
Busted Arrests Portsmouth Scioto County Mugshots

Busted! 12/10/25 New Arrests in Portsmouth, Ohio – Scioto County Mugshots

December 10, 2025
Wheelersburg

Wheelersburg Drug Bust and Hazmat Scare

December 10, 2025

ABOUT US

We are a grassroots team of local journalists on a mission to give our community up-to-the-second news and events for Southern Ohio, Northern Kentucky, and Western West Virginia. We believe progress inspires change and we believe our reporting has become the front-lines of Portsmouth, Ohio's comeback.

CATEGORIES

  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Casino
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Feel Good
  • Food & Drink
  • Local Business
  • National
  • Obituaries
  • Ohio
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Public Safety
  • Regional
  • Strange But True
  • Video

AREAS SERVED

  • Portsmouth
  • Wheelersburg
  • Minford
  • Waverly
  • Friendship
  • Ironton
  • West Union
  • Piketon
  • Coal Grove
  • South Point
  • Vanceburg
  • Grayson
  • South Shore
  • Greenup
  • Raceland
  • Ashland

SITE SEARCH

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

© 2025 Scioto County Daily News. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Public Safety
  • Lawrence County
  • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Feel Good
  • All News
  • About Us
    • Meet Our Team
    • FAQ
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise on SCDN
  • Legal
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service

© 2025 Scioto County Daily News. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Public Safety
  • Lawrence County
  • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Feel Good
  • All News
  • About Us
    • Meet Our Team
    • FAQ
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise on SCDN
  • Legal
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service

© 2025 Scioto County Daily News. All Rights Reserved.