Inspired by Our Primary Purpose

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Inspired by Our Primary Purpose The basic purposes of our world services are communication, coordination, information, and guidance. We provide these services so that our groups and members can more successfully carry the message of recovery and so that our program of recovery can be made more available to addicts everywhere. Although all parts of our service structure affect and are affected by NA as a whole, only at this level do we find service bodies designed to deal with problems that involve our entire fellowship. A Guide to World Services in NA NA World Services, Inc. Annual Report 1 July 2011 30 June 2012

Contents Inspired by Our Primary Purpose A Note from Your World Board 1 Your World Services Trusted Servants 4 Conference Projects 7 Service System 7 Traditions Book Project 8 An Introduction to NA Meetings Project 8 Fellowship Issue Discussions 9 Fellowship Development 13 NAWS Workshops Around the World 13 Meeting Growth 15 Public Relations 16 2011 Membership Survey 19 Essential Ongoing Services 21 Fellowship Services 21 Translations 26 Information Technology 31 Production and Distribution 35 Our Fellowship s Literature & Trademarks 43 World Convention 45 Staff and Offices 49 Financial Reports 55 Consolidated Statement of Financial Position (Balance Sheet) 57 Consolidated Statement of Activities (Income Statement) 58 Independent Auditors Report 63 Invest in Our Vision 75 Regional Contributions 79

All of the efforts of Narcotics Anonymous are inspired by the primary purpose of our groups. Upon this common ground we stand committed.

Inspired by Our Primary Purpose A Note from Your World Board As we do each year, we would like to begin this report by expressing how grateful we are to have the chance to serve the NA Fellowship. This report is our yearly check-in, giving us the opportunity to review what we have accomplished over the past year and to look ahead to what s on the horizon. In the years since NA World Services shifted to a plan-based approach to providing services, the tasks of reviewing past performance and monitoring emerging trends have become part of an increasingly familiar and natural process for us. As more and more local service bodies begin to incorporate plan-based approaches to their local efforts, our hope is that providing a glimpse into our planning efforts through this report will serve to inspire those local committees in their efforts to support the NA groups and further our primary purpose. Last year, our NAWS Annual Report incorporated a fair amount of information from our planning process. In particular, much of the information was related to the work being carried out in the 2010 2012 conference cycle in response to trends identified in our environmental scan. Our planning process is a two-year cycle linked to the World Service Conference, and so as the 2012 WSC took place, our various projects were concluded, reaffirmed, or newly adopted for the coming conference cycle. For the first time since restructuring in 1998, the WSC elections resulted in a full 18-member World Board. We are looking forward to working together as a full board to continue in our strategic planning process, including updating our environmental scan to make note of any changes and new developments that should be taken into consideration as we move ahead. In the first part of the 2011 2012 fiscal year, we were in the final stretch leading up to the 34th World Convention of NA, which took place in San Diego, California. Because we publish our annual report at the end of the calendar year, we were able to report on WCNA 34 in the previous issue of this report. The convention was quite successful, with over 13,000 members from 1

NA World Services, Inc. Annual Report 2012 47 countries coming together to celebrate recovery In a Spirit of Unity. After having begun the fiscal year with WCNA 34, we were then set to make preparations for the 2012 World Service Conference, which took place closer to the end of the fiscal year. The 2012 World Service Conference was historic for a few reasons. First, the Fellowship had the opportunity to vote on our latest book-length recovery literature, Living Clean: The Journey Continues, which was approved unanimously. There has been a tremendous buzz throughout the Fellowship about this book, and we heard shortly after the conference that Living Clean literature study meetings were popping up already in a number of places. The other historic aspect of WSC 2012 was the continuation of the Service System Project. For that conference, the next step of the project involved trying to identify areas of agreement about some of the foundational aspects of what our service system in NA should look like. There has been a range of responses to some of the ideas being discussed in connection with this project, and our hope for the conference was to discuss these ideas and the Fellowship s responses in order to set the tone for the coming conference cycle and further Service System Project work to be done. Overall, the tone of WSC 2012 was spirited and civil, with various perspectives being discussed and some measure of agreement being reached in terms of the future of this work. We appreciate the opportunity to come together at the conference to work constructively toward furthering the primary purpose of the NA groups. The theme for this year s annual report comes from WSC 2012, Inspired by Our Primary Purpose. In our collective efforts to further the work that begins in our recovery meetings carrying the message to still-suffering addicts we often face great challenges. Both sales and contributions continue to be down compared to previous years. The new budget adopted at WSC 2012 reflects a more conservative view of how long it could take to return to the level of financial activity that we saw prior to the worldwide economic issues of the past few conference cycles. Finding the most costeffective and creative approaches for moving toward our vision continues to be of utmost importance due to the continuing challenges of reduced revenue. The cost-cutting and saving measures that we have undertaken over the last several years have made it possible for us to get by with less. In some areas we are able to find creative ways to try to achieve the same goals in cost-effective ways, but in some cases it simply means we have to put work on hold or cut it entirely due to lack of funds. The most heartbreaking aspect of doing so is being unable to know for certain which work might have made it possible for a still-suffering addict in a particular place to hear our message and find recovery. As we have mentioned before, we are not like many other international businesses and nonprofit organizations in that we do not have the liberty, or the desire, to cut many of the levels of service we provide. We continue to supply translations and free or subsidized literature to new and struggling NA communities that would not otherwise have access to our printed message. We also continue to make literature available free of charge to incarcerated addicts upon request. The table below shows the trend of our distribution of free or subsidized literature over past years. 2

NA World Services, Inc. Annual Report 2012 Free and Subsidized Literature 2000-2012 $900,000 $800,000 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 $0 These sorts of services are essential to the ongoing health of NA as a whole and are integral parts of fulfilling our vision. Narcotics Anonymous is a worldwide fellowship, and the primary purpose of the groups we serve is a mission close to all of our hearts. For each member of the World Board, personal gratitude continues to drive our efforts as trusted servants. Our hope is that this annual report continues to provide meaningful information about our work. Everything we do at NA World Services helps us to further the primary purpose of the NA groups, moving us further toward a future in which every addict has an opportunity to experience our message in his or her own language and culture. We continue to move forward on behalf of the fellowship toward the goals identified and decided upon by the World Service Conference, as Inspired by Our Primary Purpose. We thank you for your continued support, and we encourage you to read this report as an account of our shared challenges and successes. 3

NA World Services, Inc. Annual Report 2012 World Board Members Board Member Term Began Term Ends Location Tana Agostini 2012 2018 Saugerties, New York, US Mary Banner 2004 2016 Little Elm, Texas, US Ron Blake 2004 2016 Richmond, Victoria, Australia Junior Odilson Gomez Braz 2008 2014 São Paolo, Brazil Jim Buerer 2002 2014 North Chicago, Illinois, US Iñigo Calonje Unceta 2010 2016 Estepona, Málaga, Spain Paul Craig 2006 2016 Quispamsis, New Brunswick, Canada Irene Crawley 2012 2018 Dublin, Ireland Mukam Harzenski-Deutsch 2004 2016 Ship Bottom, New Jersey, US Paul Fitzgerald 2012 2018 Cairo, Egypt Bob Gray 2012 2018 Fort Lauderdale, Florida, US Arne Hassel-Gren 2006 2018 Victoria, British Columbia, Canada Mark Hersh 2006 2018 Eskilstuna, Sweden Franney Jardine 2006 2018 Olympia, Washington, US Tali McCall 2012 2016 Anahola, Hawaii, US Ron Miller 2004 2016 Winter Haven, Florida, US Tonia Nikolinakou 2006 2018 Athens, Greece MaryEllen Polin 2012 2016 Simi Valley, California, US Human Resource Panel Pat P 2010 2014 Poteau, Oklahoma, US Mark W 2010 2014 Pensacola, Florida, US Lib E 2012 2016 Sydenham, Christchurch, New Zealand David J 2012 2016 Salford, United Kingdom WSC Cofacilitators Marc G, Madison, Wisconsin, US Dickie D, Amite, Louisiana, US 4

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Our vision is that one day: Every addict in the world has the chance to experience our message in his or her own language and culture and find the opportunity for a new way of life