top of page
Modern Poolside Villa

Skyline Sober Living Network

new skyline logo 2_edited_edited_edited.png

Our Mission​

Skyline Sober Living Network’s mission is to transform lives impacted by addiction by providing safe, structured sober living environments grounded in accountability, 12-step recovery principles, and strong community support. Through life-skills development, employment readiness, mentorship, and meaningful service to others, we empower individuals to rebuild their lives and reintegrate into society with humility, stability, purpose, and dignity — cultivating leaders in recovery who strengthen families, neighborhoods, and the broader community.

Our Story 

 

​Skyline Sober Living was founded in 2015 with a simple belief: recovery should be built on structure, accountability, and community—not profit. Over time, we witnessed how the reputation of sober living was being damaged by operators who treated recovery housing like a business transaction, prioritizing occupancy and revenue over the well-being of the people they claimed to serve. That approach undermines trust, weakens standards, and ultimately harms the very individuals seeking a real chance at rebuilding their lives. ​

​

In 2026, Skyline made the deliberate decision to transition into a nonprofit organization so the mission could never be compromised by financial incentives. As a nonprofit, our focus is singular: people, recovery, and long-term outcomes.  

​This structure allows us to reinvest every dollar into the community—providing structured living environments,

​​scholarship opportunities for those who cannot afford housing, hands-on leadership, and a recovery culture rooted in integrity and belonging. Skyline exists to restore what sober living was always meant to be: a place where individuals can rebuild their lives with dignity, support, and accountability.

Becoming a community-based Nonprofit 

 

Operating as a nonprofit fundamentally changes the priorities of a recovery home. Without shareholders or private owners drawing profit, every dollar Skyline receives is reinvested directly into the mission—strengthening the homes, expanding scholarship opportunities, improving programming, and building a stronger recovery community. This structure creates transparency, accountability, and oversight that reinforces the integrity of the organization and ensures decisions are guided by long-term outcomes rather than short-term financial gain.

For residents, the impact is tangible.

 

A nonprofit model allows Skyline to focus on stability, structure, and personal growth rather than occupancy numbers. It opens the door to scholarships for individuals who might otherwise be unable to afford safe housing, supports additional recovery programming, and strengthens the sense of community within each home. Most importantly, it allows Skyline to build an environment where residents are treated as people in a recovery journey—not customers—creating a culture of accountability, belonging, and long-term success that benefits not only the residents themselves, but their families and the broader recovery community.

​

​​

​

bottom of page