Newton is focusing mainly on the military style boot camps and proposing that they get further regulation. None of this will make much of a difference to TBS or wilderness programs in the long run. This bill/Regulation does nothing more than create a new bureaucratic arm of the government
No. That's exactly what it doesn't do. Read the bill. All it does it throw money at the problem, trusting in the states. Arguably, it means more waste in the local government and that's about it. There is still no federal level investigation / enforcement. The bill relies on the states to carry this out. Existing corruption should already show that's a bad idea. If there was a government agency dedicated to looking over these facilities it might be a little more effective (not that the whole concept of these places isn't still hopelessly misguided, ethically wrong, and destined to failure).
But for once I agree with you. This legislation is crap.
[/quote]funding for individual states to hire some close supporters' family members who cant get a job in the private sector because of their lack of education or drive, so they put them to work inspecting boarding schools, looking at their record keeping process, number of fire escapes, staff to student ratio,nurses office has its license on the door and is current, number of chairs in the cafeteria and adequate heating system etc. Then the director of admissions is typically tapped on the shoulder to take this guy out to the nicest restaurant in town and review their findings, make a cash donation to the guys favorite charity and wait for their license to be renewed for another year.[/quote]
My GOD... You're admitting it functions that way. What hath the WHO WROUGHT TODAY. MY GOD I think it's an instance of the who telling the brutal, honest truth about the industry...
[/quote]The problem with regulation is its all paperwork and bs (reviewing regulations) no one will talk to a kid ever!! What do the kids know? how would you document that? They are not old enough to sign anything or attest.
Who wants to talk to a bunch of kids bitching about how shitty the food is….would you ever get a positive response?[/quote]
And then it's comments like that put you bump you up higher on my shit list, not to mention make me want to tear your head off and ram it up your ass.
Oddly enough, you seem to be asking an interesting question "would you ever get a positive response?" You ask that as if it's rhetorical and you're expecting the answer to be "no" in almost, if not all cases. In essence, you're admitting that it is highly unlikely that any of the incarcerated kids think what's happening to them is a good thing, and those who do have a certain eerie religious fervor about their devotion to the school (or eyes that quickly dart in the staff's direction on "difficult" questions). Ever notice how enthusiastic so many "sucess stories" / testimonials are.
The only way I see to curb abuse is:
Instead of regulation take the same amount of money and they should hire child advocates who enter a school and audit 10 children at random and talk to the kids (no one else), answer some standard questions and then monitor the responses compared to state averages. If abuse is suspected then they go back in and pull 25 children and compare it to state responses and so on. If abuse is found then the child advocate waits for authorities (DSS, police) to show up and the advocate goes home (no interfacing with school officials).