| Choice Help Center |
307-789-4753 |
| Northwest Passage |
801-364-3138 |
| Haven |
801-533-0070 |
| Salvation Army |
801-621-3580 |
| Serenity House |
801-392-5971 |
| First Step House |
801-359-8862 |
| Volunteers of America (women/child) |
801-261-9177 |
| TC of the Rocky Mountai |
435-843-5602 |
What Type of Treatment is Best For Me?
Deciding which treatment is best for you can depend on a number of factors including:
- The drug of addiction
- The length of addiction
- The degree of addiction
- Co-occurring disorders
- Time commitments
- Health problems
- Drug history and previous treatments
The decision is a personal one but if, for example, you have undergone certain treatments before and they didn't resonate with you then you will know to try something different. A common mistake that people make is choosing the simplest, easiest method of detoxification with little or no rehabilitation. Breaking the physical addiction to drugs and alcohol is important, but only part of the equation. Sustaining an abstinent life without healing the mental and spiritual wounds that originally led to substance abuse is near to impossible.
DrugRehabUtah.org is a free referral service to help people find drug and/or alcohol rehab programs and treatment centers in Utah. Finding the right drug treatment in Utah that fits your needs can be a long, exhausting, and frustrating process without professional help. Drug Rehab Utah counselors have tremendous knowlege and experience in assessing your specific treatment needs and we utilize an extensive Utah Drug Rehab database containing Utah drug and/or alcohol rehabs and treatment programs. We are able to provide you with all your drug rehab and treatment options that best fits your specific situation and treatment needs. Whether you are looking for out-patient treatment, in-patient treatment, short-term drug rehab, long-term drug rehab, drug or alcohol detox, drug intervention, or counseling groups, Drug Rehab Utah can find the right program for you.
Using our database containing information on drug rehab and treatment centers in Utah, we can provide you with the best Utah treatment center based on specific criteria gathered from your personal situation. We assess each individuals specific situation and then provide an individually tailored treatment plan and cooresponding program that will give the greatest potential for success. At Drug Rehab Utah dot org, we understand that every situation is unique and we will guide you through every step of choosing the correct Utah treatment program for you or your loved one. We are dedicated in helping every addict or alcoholic get the treatment they need reguardless of financial situation. Don't wait. Fill out the form above or Call Us Now!
1.877.578.2809
History
The area called Taylorsville today is made up of three historic communities in the central part of Salt Lake County: Taylorsville, Bennion, and Kearns. Taylorsville, Bennion, and part of Kearns became the City of Taylorsville during the centennial anniversary of Utah statehood, 1996.
The land on which Taylorsville is located is part of an interconnected alluvial plain that was formed by the wearing down of the Wasatch and Oquirrh Mountains to the east and west. Beneath the surface Taylorsville sits on more than a kilometer of unconsolidated rock, sand, and clay. The inactive Taylorsville Fault has been traced down the center of the Salt Lake Valley. Lake Bonneville shaped the topography of the area and deposited lake bottom clay and sand. As Lake Bonneville dried up over the past 14,000 years, the salt from the breakdown of rock remains, making the soil alkaline. Like most desert soils, it has little organic material and is hard to work.
A broad, east-west running ridge called "Bennion Hill" rises perhaps a hundred and fifty feet above the surrounding area. Bennion Hill is the eastern end of a wide ridge which rises toward Farnsworth Peak in the Oquirrh Mountains to the west.
The first (unnamed) people in the region appeared during or after the last ice age on the shores of what remained of Lake Bonneville. Less than five miles (8 km) from Taylorsville evidence of people killing and eating a mammoth have been found. Some of this region’s first named visitors were Fremont people who used the area to hunt and gather food along the Jordan River more than a thousand years ago. A large Fremont settlement on City Creek used the land where Taylorsville is located as hunting and foraging especially along the river. In more recent times Ute bands passed through the valley between the marshes of the Great Salt Lake and Utah Valley. Most of the area was dry sagebrush-covered land without any natural water sources except the Jordan River. A well-used Ute trail wound along the west side of the river at approximately 1300 West which the Ute used in spring and fall. Early settlers observed small encampments of Ute in the cottonwoods along the Jordan River. At least one local settler called these people the "Yo-No'". Whether the name is his own creation or an approximation of something they said is unknown.
There are poorly documented suggestions that Spanish missionaries, soldiers, and explorers came through the area beginning in the mid-1600s. The whole region was called "Teguayo" and "Lake Copalla" (Utah Lake) appear on maps of Spanish Nuevo Mexico. Spanish and then Mexican land claims remained until the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo which ended the Mexican War in 1853 and ceded the whole of northern Mexico to the United States including a few thousand Mormon settlers who had taken up residence in July 1847.