Hilltop Recovery Ministries expands with inpatient care
February 19, 2026

Hilltop Recovery Ministries (HRM) launched their inpatient Christian recovery center for marginalized women in 2025.
Addicted women who are homeless or are at risk are at the focus of Tanya Roper’s efforts at HRM. Six women graduated the impatient program and entered into their very own homes.
Roper, the executive director of HRM, inherited the ministry in 2019, serving women in Bell County and beyond.
In 2019, her first client was a young woman “who had been kidnapped by her boyfriend and held in a closet for three days.”
Upon entering HRM, a sign over the hallway can be seen: “If you don’t climb the mountain, you can’t see the view.”
HRM uses outreach, outpatient care, and inpatient care to help addicted, abused, and trafficked women heal.
Their outreach program seeks homeless women or those on the brink, hoping to gain their trust. Recently approved as a warming facility, potential clients are able to see they are not in a lockdown facility.
Roper said, “They see that we’re not these things that they may have in their mind of what recovery looks like. With all that trauma, and trust and everything.”
Their intensive outpatient program offers “case management, therapy, and life skills,” said Roper.
Then there is the inpatient care at the historic Cora Anderson Hospital, an African American hospital during segregation.
Here they hold six group sessions per day for the women. Sobriety is phase one. After 30 days of sobriety, if they choose, they enter the second phase of the inpatient treatment.
Roper said, “They’re looking for a place to feel safe and valued. They’re really looking for change.”
Roper added that clients are able to stay for six months, as they become self-sufficient.
“They’re getting jobs, getting ready to get housing. We work on budgets, and they’re responsible for paying a portion of their programming fees.”
Roper and her team, through donations, grants, and volunteers, are able to serve each woman at less than $100 a day.
HRM has the capacity to host 10 women, but they need a 10–12 passenger van in order to take in the additional women.
Roper said, “In a year, we’ve graduated six women, and when I say graduated, that means living independently in their own home, employed, and sober. We think we don’t have time. We think it takes a lot of money, and yet it really doesn’t. Don’t discredit how you can be involved.”
Bell County has a 14% higher than national average of women experiencing homelessness. Addiction was cited as their biggest barrier to getting out of homelessness.
The HRM website is http://www.HilltopRecoveryMinistries.org. Their Facebook page is http://www.facebook.com/HRMBelton.








