Well, it's official. The owners/operators are making bank while their staff is qualified for public assistance (food stamps). And people wonder why kids are getting shortchanged in these facilities?
Private-run teen detention workers paid less
By Kathleen Chapman
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Saturday, September 17, 2005
Workers who guard and mentor teens in privately run programs for teen offenders make so little that some qualify for food stamps and other aid, according to a state report released Friday.
The typical worker in a private residential center for troubled teens makes $18,663 a year, thousands less than employees in similar state-run programs. But the executives who run private programs under state contract are doing fine ? taking home higher salaries on average than their counterparts in state government, the study found.
Read Article Here (under Breaking News)
http://www.teenadvocatesusa.org