Shanghai Daily

Drug rehabilita­tion center hosts job fair

- Yang Meiping

ZHANG Hua, a 42-year-old drug addict being treated at Shanghai Women’s Drug Rehabilita­tion Center, got a job offer yesterday at a recruitmen­t fair organized at the center.

The fair was the largest ever held at a local rehab center. Over 60 enterprise­s offered more than 440 jobs at the fair yesterday, which coincided with the Internatio­nal Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Traffickin­g.

About 205 addicts, including Zhang, received offers during the fair and will go to work after their release.

“It’s hard for people with a history of drug abuse to find jobs by ourselves,” she said. “The authority’s help is extremely needed and I’m so grateful.”

Zhang is on her fourth stint in the center for compulsory drug rehabilita­tion. She says a lack of stable employment is a factor behind her continued struggle with addiction.

Zhang used to work as a model and then as an airline stewardess. In 1994 when she traveled to Thailand, she tried heroin at a local pub, which changed her life completely.

She was put into rehab for the first time in 1996. After she was released in 1998, one of her friend recommende­d her to a bank, where she worked for nearly three years under a temporary employment contract. But when the bank planned to sign an official contract with her and did a further background check, she was fired when they found her drug record. In her distress she turned to former friends, and former habits involving narcotics.

The cycle of employment, terminatio­n and drug abuse repeated for Zhang. According to her CV, she worked for another three financial companies, including Morgan Stanley, and each job ended like the first.

But the fair yesterday at the rehab center has given Zhang confidence again.

“When I was looking for jobs by myself previously, I dared not tell employers about my drug problem in fear that they would discrimina­te against me and reject me,” she said. “But the companies that showed up ... already know our problems and are still willing to come and hire us. It means they will accept us. It makes me feel a little bit assured.”

Zhang will be released in March. She says she will cherish the opportunit­y to work hard and return to normal life.

The Shanghai rehabilita­tion administra­tion is treating employment as a pathway to improve the success of treatment and reduce rates of relapse.

According to the administra­tion, about two thirds of the 6,000 or so addicts in rehab centers have only a middle-school education or less, and 43 percent were unemployed before being put in rehab.

To promote employabil­ity, rehab centers have been providing education and vocational training for addicts, in fields such as plumbing, property management, hairdressi­ng, tea art, flower arrangemen­t and auto repair. This year alone, 732 people have finished training in at least one area.

In a survey of 5,333 released addicts, 90 percent said they still had difficulti­es getting employment. For many, such problems are a major obstacle toward reintegrat­ion into society.

To address the problems of employment, the administra­tion cooperated with the city’s human resources and social security bureau to organize the job fair yesterday.

They surveyed the addicts to learn about the jobs they preferred and talked to related enterprise­s.

Yu Haiyang, a human resources director at a company which took part in the fair, said companies should shoulder the social responsibi­lity to help recovering addicts restart life with a clean slate.

The authoritie­s also provided lectures guiding addicts on interview skills, communicat­ion and group work to prepare them for the job fair and their future careers.

The jobs offered at the fair were mainly in manufactur­ing, service and sales industries and the average salary ranged between 3,000 to 5,000 yuan (US$456 to US$760) per month, while some even offering more than 8,000 yuan per month.

More such fairs will be held as the rehabilita­tion administra­tion and the human resources and social security bureau have made them a long-term plank in anti-drug efforts.

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