We’re hiring! – Primary Therapist

We’re hiring! Join the Green Hill team as a Primary Therapist.

About Green Hill Recovery
Green Hill Recovery is an academically oriented, substance use disorder recovery program that offers integrated sober living and intensive outpatient services. We provide structured sober living, academic and career coaching, experiential and holistic therapy as well as intensive outpatient clinical services to young adult men.

We are a values-based, mission-driven organization. Together, we strive to build a community of leaders living purposeful lives. To us, human flourishing is the name of the game. Our primary focus is helping young adult men recover from substance use and other co-occurring mental health disorders. 

We believe that to best serve others, we must focus on our own personal and professional development. We emphasize mentorship and coaching among our team. For those struggling with substance use disorder, it’s crucial to build a network of people who have successfully navigated personal recovery. Our team is based on this philosophy.

Summary:
The Green Hill Recovery Primary Therapist will serve as a member of a multidisciplinary team to provide professional level counseling to clients and their families under the direction of the Clinical Director. As a member of the treatment team, they are responsible to provide a broad range of treatment services including individual, group, and family therapy, crisis intervention as well as completing assessments and reports. They will work closely with guardians, families, and referral sources to provide quality care to those served. The Primary Therapist will also contribute to the development of clinical curriculum utilized throughout the Green Hill Recovery program.

Duties and Responsibilities

❖ Underlining denotes an Essential job function that will be used in routine performance evaluations

  1. Leads individual, group and family therapy sessions with both Green Hill Recovery’s Community Program and Transitional Living clients 
  2. Utilizes behavioral management strategies, including but not limited to Cognitive Behavioral, Motivational Interviewing, and Community Reinforcement Approaches
  3. Effectively and compassionately manages a minimum caseload of 8 GHR clients at any given time    
  4. Completes Master Treatment Plans and conducts routine treatment plan reviews with each client according to GHR’s policy and procedure
  5. Completes Transitions Plans and Discharge Summaries with each client according to GHR’s policy and procedure
  6. Provides weekly (or as needed) Family Therapy utilizing Green Hill’s Family Program material  
  7. Provides clinical case management including: correspondence with families, outside medical professionals, referring professionals, members of the judicial system, insurance companies and other stakeholders as needed  
  8. Responds to email/text/phone communication within 24 business hours
  9. Completes timely and accurate clinical charting and progress notes according to GHR’s policy and procedure 
  10. Conducts urine drug screens as clinically fit
  11. Attends and participates in weekly clinical meetings including: individual supervision with the CD, and weekly treatment team clinical meetings; Brings new ideas and solutions to identified problems
  12. Conducts clinical assessments and assigns diagnoses for newly admitted clients 
  13. Collaborates with necessary parties (i.e., utilization management) on clinical justification for continuing care needs
  14.  Assists with crisis management and on-call support 
  15.  Assists in the development and facilitation of GHR’s experiential programing 
  16.  Assists in the development of clinical procedures.
  17.  Pursues professional development opportunities including mandated continuing education and maintenance of proper licensure  

Minimum Qualifications

  • Current licensure: Dual licensure as LCAS and/or LCMHC, LMFT, LCSW
  • Master’s Degree in human services related field
  • Valid driver’s license and clean driving record
  • Ability to pass Green Hill Recovery’s background check

Competencies

  • Experience working with complex, dually diagnosed clients who present with needs related to emotional regulation, anger management, family dysfunction patterns, and substance use or other process addictions
  • Experience and knowledge based skills used to conduct family therapy with a central focus on family structure with an addiction disorder present
  • Ability to perform a comprehensive clinical assessment and use of the ASAM PPR-2 to justify client level of care clinical needs
  • Ability to work interpersonally and utilize Motivational Interviewing with clients
  • Exceptional organizational skills and attention to detail
  • Excellent oral and written communication skills
  • Must be approachable and friendly and be able to exude empathy and control in communication with clients and parents 
  • Must have strong problem-solving skills and strong service skills
  • Have the flexibility to respond quickly and appropriately to changing circumstances and clients’ needs. Ability to show initiative and take the lead on projects, while also being able to take direction when needed
  • Ability to type, and view a computer screen
  • Visual, Hearing, Dexterity & Mental demands
  • Ability to meet standard office physical demands

Job Description and Hiring Approval: Executive Director and Clinical Director
Reports to: Clinical Director   
Employment: Non-exempt 

If you are interested in this role, please send an email and a copy of your CV to careers@greenhill.advaita.health

Cassidy Conway Joins the Green Hill Team as Primary Therapist

Green Hill is excited to announce that Cassidy Conway LCAS-A, LCMHC-A, NCC has joined the team as a Primary Therapist for our Outpatient program. Cassidy conducts individual and group counseling for our Outpatient clients, helping them along their journey of growth and development through the Green Hill curriculum. In addition to counseling, Cassidy is actively working to expand the Green Hill curriculum to an online platform. 

Cassidy graduated from Drexel University with a dual-degree in Psychology and Behavioral Health Counseling and received her Master’s degree in Counseling from UNC Charlotte. Cassidy believes her professional calling for providing substance use counseling found her, rather than the other way around. While working in a hospital, Cassidy recognized for the first time a clear stigma against the disease of addiction in a medical setting. 

Such experiences drove her passion to educate and advocate for the recovery community.  Cassidy uses a person-centered, trauma informed, and systemic approach, adjusting her treatment plans to account for the individual life journey of each client. She finds the power of community and collaboration within counseling to be essential components of treatment.

Green Hill’s Outpatient Director Brandon Robinson had this to say about Cassidy: “Cassidy is someone who sees recovery as a process and knows her role is to support that process, whether it goes forward or backwards.  Her sensitivity, quirky humor, and creativity set her apart from other professionals, but most of all, her ability to role model how the female gender can influence and relate to young men in early recovery is paramount.”

Check back soon to see our Meet the Team feature on Cassidy for a chance to get to know her even better.

Welcome to the team Cassidy!

Meet Our Primary Therapist: Casey Miller

Could we get some brief biographical info from you? Hometown, previous experience, education, etc.?

I’m from the Swamplands of Central Florida: Gainesville. Growing up in a college town, academia and the collegiate spirit were as present as the humidity or the mosquitoes. My dad was an administrator at the University of Florida, my mom went to graduate school there when I was a child, and my brother completed undergrad there when I was in high school. The culture and availability of academia to me were great privileges.

I spent the first 27 years of my life in Gainesville, and completed my undergraduate education in spurts at Santa Fe College and subsequently the University of Florida, studying Religion and English Literature with a focus on queer theory. After struggling in school as a teen, I ended up graduating summa cum laude from UF. However, like so many other liberal arts majors before me, I followed the legacy of working in the service industry after college as a cook and server.

I dabbled in teaching here and there. I had some volunteer gigs, but mostly, I was stagnating. It was during this time that I had my own experience with problematic substance use and subsequently found a recovery path. Confidence bolstered, I moved up to North Carolina to pursue my MSW at UNC-Chapel Hill and had my first internship at Green Hill. And now I’m back.

When I entered graduate school, I didn’t anticipate working in the substance use treatment field, but as our Clinical Director Matt O’Connor once told me, sometimes we don’t get to choose what we’re great at. Looking back, I can see how my experiences prepared me for just this role.

What do you believe makes Green Hill stand out in its field, and why?

What constantly impresses me about Green Hill is the way compassion and humanity permeate every level of the organization. There is never a point where care for our clients and staff are not at the center of decision making, especially when those decisions are hard. For example, I have seen our directors spend countless hours supporting client families even after their official time in our program. At the end of the day, everyone here shows up as a full person.

What keeps you coming back day after day?

This job is fun! There is truly no better feeling than watching someone get in touch with themself and start the process of growth. That and playing basketball with the clients…and our Program Coordinator, Jay Bylund. There are too many things to name.

What was your dream job as a kid, and why?

I wanted to be an architect, which, in retrospect, is madness. I would have cried everyday in architect school. I’m crying right now even thinking about being in architect school. Not to mention I can’t read a map or put together IKEA furniture correctly. I’m glad I’m a therapist.

What’s one memory you’ll always take with you from your time here in Green Hill?

This is less a single memory, but my favorite moments are from group therapy sessions. This is where the work that clients are doing truly shines. It’s amazing to see our guys support each other and show up as their true selves.

What’s one thing your hometown could be known for, and why?

There is this kind of underground artist named Tom Petty who grew up in Gainesville and started his career there. He had some modest hits, such as “Free Fallin’”, “Last Dance with Mary Jane,” and “American Girl.” You may have heard of him. 

What does your ideal day look like?

I wake up and eat some carrot cake with cream cheese icing for breakfast. Full pot of coffee already made for me by my friendly robot assistant. I go for a walk with a french bulldog. We’ve never met before. We become fast friends. His name is Pierre. He introduces me to his other friends, which include a lion and a bear who are nice. Solid friends. I return home and find that someone has installed a sparkling water tap in my house. How delightful and refreshing. I play some basketball with my friends, tend to my beautiful garden, and relax with my partner by a mossy rocky river. Returning to the rustic farmhouse that I own with no mortgage, my friends are there and we have a dance party. Today was a good day. 

What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever received? How has that advice affected your day-to-day?

To go to community college! I had some serious growing to do after high school and I had to re-learn why I liked learning in the first place. Having the freedom to work and go to school at my own pace prepared me to crave knowledge and skill in a way that I could not have achieved otherwise.

What’s one message you wish our residents at Green Hill would always take with them?

It’s okay to not be okay. In fact, what we think of as “okay” is all relative and kind of made up anyways. Feel what you feel. It’s okay if it sucks or if it rocks. It’s all okay.

Quick facts about Casey

Undergraduate school: Santa Fe College & University of Florida

Graduate school: The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Favorite book: The Watchmen

Favorite album: In the Aeroplane Over the Sea by Neutral Milk Hotel

Favorite podcast: On Being with Krista Tippett

Dream Vacation: China

Top Karaoke Song Choice: Semi-Charmed Life by Third Eye Blind

Favorite spot to visit in Raleigh: Durham

Favorite meal: Medium rare burger with American cheese

Favorite house activity: Reading

Meet Our Primary Therapist: Emily Trapp

Could we get some brief biographical info from you? Hometown, previous experience, education, etc.?

Originally, I was born in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, however, shortly after we moved to Williamsport, PA, which is where I would say my childhood took place. I have lived in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia and several places around North Carolina, everywhere from the Outer Banks to Raleigh. 

I grew up in a very medically inclined family. Both of my parents were Physician’s Assistants. As a kid, I watched Discovery Health for hours on end and some of my favorite toys included a medical cart with all the accessories. Growing up, I fell in love with animals, and always imagined being a veterinarian. I ended up going to North Carolina State University for the undecided track, but was really shooting for vet school. 

In my first year, I spent a day shadowing a large animal vet. I ended up realizing that though I thoroughly enjoyed the job, it didn’t seem right for a long-term career. In one of my classes, we had a project in which we had to interview someone in a career that interested us. Aware that being a Veterinarian was now out, I decided to interview a psychologist. Often in my life, I found myself offering my ear to friends and was always the one people called when in crisis, so I thought, why not give it a shot? One conversation and I was sold. I transitioned to a psychology degree and started focusing on working with at-risk youth.

Following graduation, I (like a lot of people) found myself having a difficult time. I felt like I lost my path. I did, however, know that I always felt safe in school, so with the encouragement of my mother, I started applying to any psychology-related programs in the area. I applied to Eastern Carolina University’s Marriage and Family Therapy program, where I was accepted. During my time in graduate school, one of the faculty picked up on my interest in at-risk youth and addiction and connected me with the Walter B. Jones Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment Center. I completely fell in love with the work there and found that finally, I was finding my path again. 

I ended up doing my internship at Walter B. Jones while completing my program and thesis. While completing my LCASA I continued to work at Walter B. Jones, but really felt called to return to Raleigh. I initially took a position at Triangle Springs as a therapist before finding a home at Green Hill Recovery. 

What made you want to work in a) the clinical field generally and b) substance abuse specifically? 

I decided to get into clinical work after deciding taking care of animals all day was not what I wanted to do professionally. I get enough of taking care of animals at home! I started my graduate program with no specific focus but always had an underlying drive to work with at-risk adolescents. Interestingly enough, I began with a fascination in teen pregnancy and worked my way into addiction.  

I tell everyone, “I wish I had a cool story but I really don’t.” I did have enough self-awareness to know I would need some guidance, and I created a great relationship with one of the faculty, who listened to my interests and continued to encourage me to work with Walter B. Jones. 

From there, I not only loved what I was doing and what I was learning, but I truly valued the relationship between my internship supervisor and what he taught me. Mr. Tart was one role model that I will hold close to my heart forever. Throughout my time at Walter B. Jones, I found that it was less about what I was teaching the patients than what they were teaching me. 

What do you believe makes Green Hill stand out in its field, and why?

Green Hill is truly, like I mentioned earlier, home. I have never worked with an entire team that cares so deeply and passionately about not only what they do, but those they work with. I think that’s what makes it so special. Treatment and therapy all begin with the relationships one builds with those they are working with. 

I believe our team is so in-tune with not only what our vision is as a program, but with what our client’s vision is for their future. We have such a unique team of people ranging from academic consultants to therapists to creativity to businesspeople. Somehow, we manage to use our strengths to come together to create a safe and encouraging place for our clients to dive into their own self-efficacy. 

What’s one memory you’ll always take with you from your time here in Green Hill?

Absolutely our very first Iron Chef challenge at the Transitional Living house. This was one of the first activities we wanted to do during the coronavirus pandemic, and it ended up being fun for everyone.

Somehow, I was voted as a chef (not proud to admit it, but I totally used the “I have a session” excuse to try to get out of it). It was the ‘Apocalypse version’, so our recipes for the Iron Chef challenge included things like spam, ramen noodles, pasta, beef jerky, etc.

It was rough, but our guys were so creative and there ended up being some dishes that were actually delicious. 

What makes Raleigh an ideal environment for young people in recovery?

Raleigh is an amazing place that encompasses everything any young adult, especially one in recovery, could desire. I love that you can easily access both the beaches and mountains. Raleigh is host to many wonderful colleges that encourage young adults to keep shooting for the moon. Raleigh also offers so many community life options, it allows people to find their own community. 

What does your ideal day look like?

Anything outside! Ideally, it would be sunny and 75. I would wake up early and head to the barn to ride my horse, Mikey. I’d give him all the sour patch kids his little (big) heart desires before heading home to get ready for the beach. A perfect day for me is a day at the beach with family, friends and a good book before having a big communal dinner and talking about all the embarrassing moments from childhood. 

Can you name one female role model you have, and what that person has had such an impact?

In my personal life, I would absolutely have to say my mother. As a single mother in the medical field, she has shown me what being an independent, caring, driven woman means. 

Additionally, from the time I was a child, I have always admired surfer Bethany Hamilton. I’ve admired her for her worth ethic, passion, drive, ambition and courageous demeanor. She is a person who has not let her circumstances compromise her ability to work toward her dreams. She has proved time and time again that with some effort and courage, anything is possible. One of the main reasons why I admire her is that even as one of the best, she has been vulnerable enough to share about her experiences of loss, defeat and difficulty.

Quick facts about Emily

Undergraduate school: NC State University, GO PACK! 

Graduate school: East Carolina University, GO PIRATES!  

Desert island movie: Cast Away 

Favorite book: Hmmm, the childhood book is probably Because of Winn Dixie. My tearjerker would have to be The Art of Racing in the Rain. 

Favorite podcast: Up and Vanished or Cold or Yoga Girl: Conversations from the Heart. 

Favorite sports team: ECU Pirates 

Favorite spot to visit in Raleigh: Umstead Park, I love to take my dog for walks there. 

Dream job as a child: Probably an orthopedist for a while before wanting to be a veterinarian.