Recovering addicts work to help others in ‘Project Recover’


              Chesterfield Peer recovery specialist Joy Bogese, right, talks with Rhonda Kanary while on patrol as part of Project Recover, in Chesterfield County, Va., Monday, Aug., 29, 2022. Project Recover is a program that embeds recovering addicts with police and ambulance crews in central Virginia to respond to overdose calls and to go on patrol to reach out to people struggling with drug addiction to try to get them into treatment programs. (AP Photo/Denise Lavoie)
            
              Chesterfield Patrol Officer Travis Adams, left, and peer recovery specialist Joy Bogese, center, hugs Rhonda Kanary while on patrol as part of Project Recover, in Chesterfield County, Va., Monday Aug., 29, 2022. Project Recover is a program that embeds recovering addicts with police and ambulance crews in central Virginia to respond to overdose calls and to go on patrol to reach out to people struggling with drug addiction to try to get them into treatment programs. (AP Photo/Denise Lavoie)
            
              Chesterfield Patrol Officer Travis Adams, left, and peer recovery specialist Joy Bogese, right, talk with Adam Hall as part of Project Recover, in Chesterfield County, Va., Monday, Aug., 29, 2022. Project Recover is a program that embeds recovering addicts with police and ambulance crews in central Virginia to respond to overdose calls and to go on patrol to reach out to people struggling with drug addiction to try to get them into treatment programs. (AP Photo/Denise Lavoie)
Recovering addicts work to help others in ‘Project Recover’