The Model · Cleveland

Paid Transitional Jobs: How Recovery-to-Work Programs Build Real Work History

Recovery Grows · Updated May 22, 2026 · 7 min read

There's a chicken-and-egg trap in recovery: you can't get a job without recent work history, and you can't get work history without a job. Paid transitional jobs break that loop. They're one of the most effective tools in any recovery-to-work program — and they're the engine behind community crews in Cleveland.

What a transitional job actually is

A transitional job is temporary, paid, supported work designed as a bridge to permanent employment. You earn a real paycheck from day one, but the role exists to develop you: it builds current work history, sharpens skills, and proves reliability — all with support wrapped around it. The U.S. Department of Labor has long studied subsidized and transitional employment as a way to move people with significant barriers into the workforce.

Why it works so well for recovery

Transitional work hits several recovery levers at once:

Community beautification crews: work that gives back

Recovery Grows runs paid community beautification crews — participants improve Cleveland neighborhoods while building their own futures. It's a double return: blighted spaces get restored, and the people doing the restoring rebuild work history and self-worth at the same time. The crew becomes a visible answer to the city's problems and the participant's at once.

The bridge, not the destination. A transitional job isn't the end goal — it's the on-ramp. The whole design points toward permanent placement with an employer, using the recent work history the crew created. (More on recovery-friendly employers.)

How the full recovery-to-work pipeline fits together

  1. Drop-in support — meet people where they are, stabilize first.
  2. Job readiness — practical skills and coaching.
  3. Paid transitional work — community crews that pay now and build history.
  4. Permanent placement — with employers who understand recovery.

Each stage is paid or supported, and each one earns the next. The transitional job is the hinge in the middle — without it, people stall between "stable" and "employed." See the full model.

For cities, employers, and funders

The reason this model attracts public dollars, philanthropy, and employer partners is simple: it solves several problems with one investment — addiction recovery, unemployment, and neighborhood blight — and it's built to replicate from one city to the next. Crews generate visible community value; placements reduce long-term public costs; employers gain dependable workers. If you're a funder, employer, or city partner, that's a rare alignment of mission and math.

Partner with or join Recovery Grows

Whether you're in recovery and ready to work, or an employer, funder, or city ready to back a model that works — Recovery Grows connects support, paid transitional work, and permanent placement into one pipeline built for Cleveland and designed to scale.

Frequently asked questions

What is a transitional job?

Temporary, paid, supported work designed as a bridge to permanent employment. Participants earn a paycheck while building current work history and skills, with support wrapped around them.

How do paid community crews help recovery?

They provide income, structure, routine, and a sober peer group — all of which protect recovery — while producing visible neighborhood improvements that become proof of reliability for future employers.

Do transitional jobs lead to permanent work?

That's the point. A well-designed program uses the transitional job as a stepping stone, then places participants with permanent employers using the recent, verifiable work history it created.

Who funds recovery-to-work programs?

A blend of public workforce and behavioral-health funding, philanthropy, social-enterprise revenue from the crews, and employer and community-development partnerships — designed to replicate city to city.

One investment. Three problems solved.

Recovery, work, and neighborhood transformation — held together by one pipeline. Join Recovery Grows or back the model.