319 AA Meeting

When people talk about a 319 AA meeting they are usually referring to the 319 AA Group, an online Alcoholics Anonymous group that runs meetings around the clock on Zoom. Since March 2020, this group has hosted AA meetings twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, with a new chair every hour. It has become a familiar destination for newcomers, long-time members, and people who cannot get to in-person meetings but still want a real AA experience.

The number 319 is the group’s name, not a special format or step level. It identifies a specific AA group and its online meeting room, similar to how local groups call themselves things like “Thursday Night Men’s” or “Downtown Big Book.” Understanding how 319 operates helps you decide whether it fits what you or your clients need, especially if you are looking for accessible meetings or proof of attendance in an online setting.

Key Points

  • “319 AA meeting” usually means attending the 319 AA Group, a Zoom-based AA group with meetings available twenty-four hours a day.
  • 319 is a group name and number, not a special AA format. The group follows standard AA principles, readings, and meeting styles.
  • The main 319 room is open constantly, with different chairs, topics, and sub-meetings scheduled through the week.
  • There are dedicated meetings for newcomers, men, women, Big Book study, Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, and speaker meetings.
  • 319 participates in the Online Intergroup of AA and appears in online AA meeting directories, which means it is recognised as a legitimate AA group in the wider fellowship.
  • For people who need flexible access, travel often, live in remote areas, or have mobility or health barriers, 319 offers AA meetings at almost any hour.

What 319 AA Group Is

319 AA Group is an Alcoholics Anonymous group that meets online instead of in a physical room. The group describes itself as a community of alcoholics working together to get and stay sober, drawn from many backgrounds and regions, all learning to live one day at a time. The main meeting space is a standing Zoom room where meetings run continuously, day and night. Chairs rotate every hour, and members can drop in whenever they need a meeting.

From AA’s perspective, 319 is simply one AA group among many. It uses AA literature, follows the Twelve Traditions, holds group conscience meetings, and maintains service positions such as host, co-host, and General Service Representative. The online setting changes how you enter the room, but not the core purpose of the group, which is to help alcoholics achieve sobriety through the AA program.

How the 319 Meeting Schedule Works

Although the main meeting room is always available, 319 structures its week with specific meeting types at set times. The group publishes a calendar on its website and in a monthly newsletter, and the Online Intergroup lists several “319” meetings by type and time.

Examples from the current schedule include:

  • Big Book study: Sunday evenings, where members read and discuss the basic text of Alcoholics Anonymous together.
  • Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions: Sunday meetings using the “Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions” book as the discussion base.
  • Men’s meeting: Monday meeting times devoted to a smaller setting where men share their experience, strength, and hope.
  • Women’s meetings (Sisters in Sobriety): Tuesday and Wednesday meetings for women, with camera-on requirements to keep the space safe and clearly women-only.
  • Newcomer meeting: Thursday night meetings designed specifically for people who are new to AA or returning after a relapse, in a smaller, more focused setting.
  • Speaker meeting: Saturday evening meetings where one member shares a longer version of their story, followed by sharing or questions.
  • Group conscience and sharing sessions: Monthly group conscience meetings and separate “sharing sessions” where members discuss group issues and make decisions about how 319 is run.

The calendar changes as the group adds or pauses specific formats, so the best practice is to check the current schedule on the 319 website or via the Online Intergroup listing before recommending or attending a particular time slot.

How to Join a 319 AA Meeting

Joining a 319 meeting is straightforward once you have the basic information. The group’s website provides a “Join 24/7 AA meeting” link, along with the Zoom meeting ID and passcode for training sessions and service roles. The Online Intergroup directory lists several 319 meetings by name, such as “319 AA Group,” “319 Newcomer Meeting,” and “319 Women’s Meeting,” with buttons that open the Zoom room directly.

In practical terms, you:

  • Visit the 319 AA Group website or the Online Intergroup meeting finder.
  • Select the meeting type or time that fits what you need, such as newcomer, women’s, or Big Book study.
  • Click the Zoom link or enter the meeting ID and passcode in your Zoom app.
  • Follow any posted instructions, such as muting when not speaking or turning your camera on if required in a women’s meeting.

For people who are anxious about in-person meetings or cannot easily travel, the ability to join from home at almost any hour is often a deciding factor in whether they attend AA at all.

What to Expect in a 319 AA Meeting

Once you are in the virtual room, a 319 meeting feels like a standard AA meeting that happens to be on a screen instead of in a church basement. Meetings typically include:

  • A welcome and short reading about what AA is.
  • Readings from the Big Book or Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, depending on the format.
  • Members sharing their experience with alcohol and recovery, often one at a time as called on by the chair or host.
  • Time for newcomers to introduce themselves if they choose, with reassurance that speaking is optional.

Because 319 is online, there are a few extra points of etiquette. Members are asked to avoid driving while sharing on camera, to keep backgrounds appropriate, and to respect camera-on requirements where specified, such as in the women’s meetings. Hosts and co-hosts are trained to manage the room, handle disruptions, and support newcomers who may be unfamiliar with Zoom.

Service and Involvement in 319

Like any AA group, 319 runs on service. The group trains co-hosts, hosts, and chairs through scheduled Zoom training sessions. Requirements typically include a minimum period of continuous sobriety, a stable device such as a computer or smartphone, and the willingness to commit time to helping the group function smoothly.

Service opportunities include:

  • Co-hosting, which involves admitting people from the waiting room, muting and unmuting participants, and supporting the chair.
  • Chairing meetings, which means leading the format, choosing readings or topics, and guiding the sharing.
  • Participating in group conscience meetings to help decide how the group handles issues such as safety, sharing guidelines, and schedule changes.

For members who cannot commit to in-person service, these roles provide a way to give back and stay connected from anywhere in the world.

How 319 Fits Into AA as a Whole

319 AA Group is one example of how AA has moved online while keeping its core structure intact. The group appears in the Online Intergroup’s directory alongside thousands of other online meetings, and it describes itself using the same language AA uses globally: a group of alcoholics who share their experience, strength, and hope to help each other stay sober.

For someone deciding whether 319 is “real AA,” a useful way to look at it is this: the group reads AA literature, follows AA traditions, holds group conscience meetings, and is open to anyone with a desire to stop drinking. Those are the elements that define an AA group. The fact that it meets on Zoom instead of in person does not change those fundamentals.

If You Were Told to Attend “319 AA Meetings”

Occasionally, courts, probation officers, or treatment programs specify 319 by name when they want a client to attend online AA. This might appear on paperwork as “attend 319 AA Group meetings” or “attend 319 AA online.” In that situation, the practical steps are similar to any court-ordered AA requirement.

  • Confirm with your officer or counselor whether any 319 meeting counts, or whether they want a specific format such as newcomer or open AA.
  • Ask what proof of attendance they require. Online AA groups sometimes provide email confirmation or sign digital attendance forms, but each court or program has its own rules.
  • Keep your own record of dates, times, and meeting types you attend, in case there are questions later.

If your paperwork simply says AA meetings and you choose 319 because it is accessible and available at your hours, you can treat it like any other AA meeting for personal recovery purposes. For legal compliance, always follow the instructions of the authority that set the condition.

Summary

“319 AA meeting” usually means attending the 319 AA Group online. This group operates a continuous Zoom-based AA meeting with scheduled formats for newcomers, men, women, Big Book study, Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, and speaker meetings. The number 319 is the group’s name and identifier rather than a code for a special AA format.

If you are looking for accessible AA meetings, 319 offers the ability to join any time of day from almost anywhere, with a variety of meeting styles. If you have been asked or required to attend 319 specifically, clarifying expectations with whoever made that request and then using the group’s calendar and Online Intergroup listings will help you meet both the practical and recovery sides of that assignment.

References

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