Notes:
Exmouth Sunday evening: new time, new venue
Notes:
Link to PI Newsletter, 2nd edition, July 2025
Open Door Centre, Church Street. EX8 1PE Notes: Map: Town: Exmouth Post Code: EX8 1PE. Is closed for emergency work on its plumbing and this affects all meetings held there on Sunday and Wednesday ar e not available until further notice. Please contact Exmouth members for up to date information.
What is PI?
Page 26 of The AA Service Handbook for Great Britain 2023 provides some helpful guidance:
“PI work is sometimes referred to as ‘Carrying the message to the general public’. This includes giving talks to doctors, nurses, social services, police, magistrates, community groups, business groups, schools, colleges and trade and professional unions and associations. Open and public meetings, exhibitions, displays, posters … also come under the heading of PI”.
Talks to local bodies
According to the Structure Handbook (p 26) “It is often said that the best example of Alcoholics Anonymous is its own sober members, particularly where a sober AA member is speaking to the general public or a group of professional people”.
Guidance is given in the Structure Handbook (p 26):
“We are the face of the Fellowship. For this reason, it is important that members carrying out PI work should have solid continuous sobriety, regular attendance at home group meetings, be conversant with the service structure and have a full working knowledge of the Twelve Traditions.
Experience has shown that intergroup and regions are the bodies that can most usefully discuss PI matters and from which one or more PI committees can be formed.”
Against that background, I seek your help as PILO for DCIG to carry AA’s message to the public and professionals. How your group can help to achieve this is twofold:
Local poster and flyer campaign
Hold a conscience/business meeting at which this is the main item on the agenda.
Members between them identify locations in the area which would be suitable for an AA poster and/or flyers. The passage quoted above helpfully identifies possible targets. For example, we have put up posters in doctors’ and dentists’ surgeries, pharmacies, police stations, “one stop shops” run by the local authority, local drug and alcohol services, public and voluntary local homeless, housing and welfare services.
Next, divide the targets between the members who are prepared to get involved in outreach. It is much easier to cover an area if there are a number of members involved and they can split the task between them, as well as providing mutual support and encouragement. The targets could be divided geographically or by type (e.g. a member may have a connection with a particular doctors’ surgery or local authority or voluntary support body). Remember that it is of course necessary to obtain the consent of the place at which the posters and flyers are to be displayed. This is often the office manager, proprietor, managerial staff or “front of house”.
Agree a time-period within which the “campaign” is to be conducted and fix the date for a further conscience/business meeting at which members are to report back. Decide whether the campaign has been successfully completed or whether further time is required to complete it.
Finally, give yourselves a pat on the back!
The posters and flyers
GSO can supply a range of posters which are available free of charge for Public Information activity. Most are available in A4 and A5 sizes (the A5 size can usefully be used as flyers). Please contact/order from GSO at carolinedavy@gsogb.org.uk.
If you would like to personalise the posters/flyers with your group’s meeting details, I have copies of an AA poster in .JPG and .PDF formats with a blanked area, so that you can add your group’s details by either sticking labels onto the poster or writing on them, or editing the file in .PDF format or using a photo editor (such as Microsoft paint) in .JPG format. If a member of the group is tech savvy and has a colour printer, the posters and flyers can be produced “in house”. Otherwise use the services of a local printer (for the cost of this see below). If you would like the files, please contact me at pilodcig@gmail.com.
GSO York produce a quarterly Service News which is packed full of great stuff that they do in conjunction with AA groups and other organisations to carry the message and support the work of recovery from alcohol addiction. Here is the latest Edition:
If you are new to AA or are searching for the answers to a ‘drinking problem’, the link below is to an online version of our AA ‘Big Book’ which has all the answers we need and you can carry it around in your pocket. Read it anywhere you have a spare moment. Great for long journeys on trains, planes, boats and waiting rooms. If you have headphones, you can listen to or watch it being read.
The national Website Meeting Finder maintains a list of almost 400 online meetings which are independent of any intergroup or region. About half in the UK and the rest in most West European Countries. To access the list use this link BUT before clicking the link read the note below:
https://www.alcoholics-anonymous.org.uk/AA-Meetings/Find-a-Meeting/
Sobriety Chips -‘Chips’ for short, are awarded by any group tagged with ‘Chips’.
If a member wishes, chips are awarded from a newcomer’s first 24 hours and then for each sober year therafter from 1 Year to 60 Years.
Use the Tag Box and select your meeting day and check for the UID after the Postcode or Zoom link.
You can then check your UID against the current GSO information via this PDF link: aa-meetings-all-2025-10-25
Using the link ‘Download Meeting List. You will have a table 7 rows by 3 columns with the UID at the foot of the meeting block. UIDs are 3 or 4 digits except for Online Meetings which begin with ‘ON’ then 3 digits.
Please note that the meeting list is in alphabetic order so not in the WTF Day-of-the-Week order. There are presently 40 meetings on this list. The Exeter Saturday evening meeting closed on 26th July 2025 and the Thursday Polish Meeting is on a separate Intergroup for Polish speaking meetings, making a total of 39 meetings.
For the 2024 Annual Report of the General Service Board please click here:
AA Service News, Autumn 2025, please click here:
PI Newsletter, Autumn 2025, please click here:
YP Newsletter, Autumn 2025, please click here:
AA Service Handbook 2024, please click here:
AA Structure Handbook 2024, please click here:
Young Persons Online Workshops 2025, please click here:
AA Literature Order Form: