- Hourly / - BiWeekly /
- Monthly / $73,957.00-$119,492.00 Yearly
The Alcohol and Drug (A/D)
Professional Counselor is the full performance level of work, at the licensed
Master’s Degree level, counseling clients with substance use disorders by using
intervention, treatment and rehabilitation. Employees in this classification
do not supervise other Alcohol and Drug Counselors.
Employees in this classification
receive general supervision from an Alcohol and Drug Professional Counselor
Supervisor or a program administrator. Employees in this classification
may be required to work evenings and weekends. The work is performed in
State addictions programs located in State institutions, facilities and offices
including inpatient and outpatient facilities, halfway house facilities and
community-based programs.
Positions in this classification are
evaluated using the classification job evaluation methodology. The use of
this method involves comparing the assigned duties and responsibilities of a
position to the job criteria found in the Nature of Work and Examples of Work
sections of the class specification.
The Alcohol and Drug Professional
Counselor is differentiated from the Alcohol and Drug Professional Counselor
Provisional on the basis of license status and supervisory control exercised by
the supervisor over these employees. The Alcohol and Drug Professional
Counselor is licensed and performs the full range of duties and
responsibilities under general supervision. The Alcohol and Drug
Professional Counselor Provisional is non-licensed and learns to perform duties
under close supervision. The Alcohol and Drug Professional Counselor is
differentiated from the Alcohol and Drug Professional Counselor Advanced in
that the Alcohol and Drug Professional Counselor Advanced is the advanced level
of professional alcohol and drug counseling work with expertise in a specialty
area.
Provides counseling and case
management services to clients with substance use disorders with the most
complex problems as defined by standard treatment criteria;
Advocates for client services,
collaborates with other disciplines involved in providing client treatment and
coordinates all treatment activities with services provided to the client by
other resources;
Provides group counseling to clients
with substance use disorders;
Evaluates client progress in
implementing the treatment plan and makes appropriate changes to ensure
progress;
Screens clients with substance use
disorders to determine the most appropriate initial course of action with
regard to substance treatment;
Assesses clients with substance use
disorders to gather and interpret information necessary for planning treatment
and evaluating client progress;
Develops client treatment plans and
strategies to obtain the desired treatment outcomes;
Makes referrals to facilitate the
client's use of available support systems and community resources in response
to needs identified in clinical evaluation;
Identifies and responds to clients in
crises;
Provides life skills education
relevant to the recovery process to clients with substance use disorders, their
families, significant others and community groups;
Documents client information in
accordance with accepted principles of client record management;
Adheres to accepted ethical and
behavioral standards of conduct and participates in continuing professional
development;
Knowledge of the philosophy,
practices, policies and outcomes of the most generally accepted and
scientifically supported models of treatment, recovery, relapse prevention and
continuing care for addiction and other substance-related problems;
Knowledge of the established
diagnostic criteria for substance use disorders, treatment modalities and
placement criteria within the continuum of care;
Knowledge of models and theories of
addiction and other problems related to substance use;
Knowledge of the social and cultural
context within which addiction and substance abuse exist;
Knowledge of the effects of
psychoactive substances on the user, their families and significant others;
Knowledge of ethical and behavioral
standards of conduct in the helping relationship;
Knowledge of principles of learning
and a variety of educational techniques;
Knowledge of medical and
pharmacological resources in the treatment of substance use disorders;
Knowledge of methods of measuring
treatment outcome;
Knowledge of federal, State, local and
agency policies and procedures governing the delivery of treatment services;
Knowledge of a variety of current and
emerging helping strategies for reducing the negative effects of substance use,
abuse and dependence;
Skill in tailoring helping strategies
and treatment modalities to the client's stage of dependence, change or
recovery;
Skill in providing treatment services
appropriate to the personal and cultural identity of the client;
Skill in adapting clinical practice to
the range of treatment settings and modalities;
Skill in applying crisis management
skills to client crises;
Skill in applying setting-specific
policies and procedures to clinical practice;
Ability to accurately document
client-related information;
Ability to make effective
presentations to a variety of audiences;
Ability to establish and maintain
working relationships with other professionals and agencies;
Ability to establish and maintain a
therapeutic relationship with clients with substance use disorders and their
families and significant others;
Ability to identify the support
systems and community resources available to clients and their families and
significant others;
Ability to identify and use the role
of family, social networks, self-help groups and community systems in the
treatment and recovery process;
Education: Determined by
the Maryland State Board of Professional Counselors and Therapists under the
requirements for Licensed Clinical Alcohol and Drug Counselors or Certified
Professional Counselors-Alcohol and Drug on or before September 30, 2008.
Experience: Determined by the
Maryland State Board of Professional Counselors and Therapists under the
requirements for Licensed Clinical Alcohol and Drug Counselors or Certified
Professional Counselors-Alcohol and Drug on or before September 30, 2008.
1. In accordance with Health
Occupations Title 17 and Code of Maryland Regulations 10.58.07, candidates
placed in this classification must be licensed by the Board of
Professional Counselors and Therapists as a Licensed Clinical Alcohol and Drug
Counselor or as a Certified Professional Counselor-Alcohol and Drug on or
before September 30, 2008.
2. Employees in this
classification may be assigned duties which require the operation of a motor
vehicle. Employees assigned such duties will be required to possess a
motor vehicle operator's license valid in the State of Maryland.
Employees in this
classification are subject to substance abuse testing in accordance with Code
of Maryland Regulations 17.04.09, Testing for Illegal Use of Drugs.
Class specifications are broad
descriptions covering groups of positions used by various State departments and
agencies. Position descriptions maintained by the using department or
agency specifically address the essential job functions of each position.
This is a Professional Service
classification in the State Personnel Management System. All positions in
this classification are Professional Service positions. Some positions in
Professional Service classifications may be designated Special Appointment in
accordance with the State Personnel and Pensions Article, Section 6-405,
Annotated Code of Maryland.
This classification is assigned to
Bargaining Unit E, Health Care Professionals classes. As provided by
State Personnel and Pensions Article, Section 3-102, special appointment,
temporary, contractual, supervisory, managerial and confidential employees are
excluded from collective bargaining. Additionally, certain executive
branch agencies are exempt from collective bargaining and all positions in
those agencies are excluded from collective bargaining.