Author Topic: tampa bay academy  (Read 20841 times)

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Offline Ursus

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Troubled academy aims to expand
« Reply #45 on: November 15, 2009, 12:48:55 AM »
Okay, here's another one:

After a long period of silence, reporter Adam Emerson updates us on Tampa Bay Academy...


(This article doesn't have any comments posted yet. Judging by the link format, I'm guessing this would be the "companion piece," which never got as many comments anyway. I was not able to find any other version of this article, however.)

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Troubled academy aims to expand
By ADAM EMERSON aemerson@tampatrib.com
Published: June 21, 2009


TAMPA - The executive director of the Tampa Bay Academy says he plans to ask the state this week to lift its moratorium on admissions, saying he has turned around the troubled mental health center and is prepared to bring it back to capacity.

Six months ago, Florida's Agency for Health Care Administration was preparing to pull the academy's license after finding "substandard" conditions and "gross mismanagement."

The academy was given another chance, however, and its top administrator says he feels "very positive about the changes" he has made.

An anonymous tip late last year unearthed evidence that residents in the treatment program preyed on workers and on each other - all made easier by the failures of a poorly trained and inadequate staff.

The state removed 54 children from the academy's treatment center but later agreed to settle. As long as the for-profit academy met every standard set by regulators, it could keep its license and enroll up to 20 children.

Now its director says he will ask to enroll more.

"We've done a lot of intensive training with our staff," said director Rich Warden, who took over the job one month before regulators threatened to suspend the academy's license. "And we've been more conservative with the type of kids we're taking, making sure we can provide quality and good care."

There are 18 children enrolled in the residential treatment center. The academy took care not to take in residents with a history of criminal behavior, Warden said.

Warden also brought back and retrained just 20 percent of the 140 workers he laid off in December. Some of the others let go contributed to the problems that regulators found, he has said.

If the state lifts the moratorium on admissions, Warden said he will plan to enroll up to 80 children.

Before that can happen, though, regulators will have to visit the academy to make sure everything is all right.

Inspectors visited earlier this month to check out a complaint, but they found no deficiencies, said Shelisha Durden, a spokeswoman for the Health Care Administration.

In its settlement agreement, the Health Care Administration noted the academy had taken some measures to improve the quality of its care before it was sanctioned.

But it's not the first time a state agency gave the academy another chance.

In 2005, the Department of Children & Families stopped Tampa Bay Academy from admitting new patients for three months after finding many of the same problems the Health Care Administration later found.

Satisfied with the results of subsequent inspections, DCF later allowed the academy to resume admissions.

Reporter Adam Emerson can be reached at (813) 259-8285.


©2009 Media General Communications Holdings, LLC.
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Offline Oscar

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Re: tampa bay academy
« Reply #46 on: November 15, 2009, 05:54:03 AM »
We have compiled our findings so far in a datasheet on the wiki.
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Offline Ursus

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Tampa Bay Academy denies claims of abuse
« Reply #47 on: November 15, 2009, 11:20:41 AM »
Here's an older piece from a different newspaper, the St. Petersburg Times, back when these charges first hit. There is some more detail here, and additional information. Apparently there have been several lawsuits against this place in the past regarding abusive conditions; two of them were still pending as of last December:

  • 2005 - a 13-year-old girl became pregnant during an 11-month stay at the facility; she had come seeking psychiatric help after being sexually abused.
  • 2006 - the adoptive mother of a deaf teenager filed suit saying her son had been sexually and physically abused by other residents.

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Tampa Bay Academy denies claims of abuse
Rebecca Catalanello, Times staff writer
In Print: Friday, December 19, 2008



The Tampa Bay Academy is under investigation because of claims of abuse, including sexual, of and by patients.

TAMPA — Attorneys for a mental health treatment center deny state findings that the residential program for troubled kids is teeming with problems that include unreported sexual assaults by minors.

Tampa Bay Academy officials have asked the 2nd District Court of Appeal to intervene, claiming the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration acted unfairly and on the basis of poor information when it ordered the facility's license be suspended.

But court records indicate this is not the first time the 20-year-old Riverview center has been the focus of complaints that unsafe conditions and inadequate supervision left children vulnerable to abuse.

In 2006, the adoptive mother of a deaf teenager filed suit saying her son had been sexually and physically abused by other residents.

A year earlier, a 13-year-old girl became pregnant during an 11-month stay at the facility, a lawsuit states. She had come seeking psychiatric help after being sexually abused.

Both suits are pending.

"It's a horrific place," said Brian Cabrey, attorney for the deaf teenager and vice president of Florida's Children First. "This stuff has been going on for years."

In the 1990s, several lawsuits alleged child-on-child abuse at the center, including one that described a 5-year-old victim.

But the Health Care Administration — which has ordered Tampa Bay Academy to relocate all of its 54 clients to other facilities by Jan. 9 — knew nothing of the earlier lawsuits, a spokeswoman said Thursday.

Despite regular reviews of the center, the agency only learned about the allegations of sex abuse from a recent anonymous tip, said Shalisha Durden, a Health Care Administration spokeswoman.

"Now that we know about them, we are looking into them," she said of the lawsuits.

Tampa Bay Academy, located on a 24-acre property at 12012 Boyette Road, provides psychiatric treatment of children ages 4 to 17 for eating disorders, chronic anxiety, drug abuse and sexual abuse, among other things, according to its Web site.

Though privately owned by Youth and Family Centered Services in Austin, Texas, the center receives funding from Medicaid and the Florida Department of Children and Families, and insurance and private pay from Florida families as well as out-of-state clients, Durden said.

The Health Care Administration ordered a moratorium last week on admissions at the center following a Dec. 8 on-site investigation that it said showed evidence of sexual assault by clients both against other clients and against staff members.

The report portrays a facility where the staff is intimidated by the youthful clients, where unruly children hold the power — so much so that in one reported instance a staff member secluded himself or herself within an office for safety.

In a point-by-point rebuttal filed in court Wednesday, attorneys for the academy wrote the allegations are exaggerated accounts of more innocuous truths.

For example:

• The Health Care Administration cited a Nov. 25 incident in which a client sexually assaulted a staff member, but the academy failed to report it to law enforcement. Tampa Bay Academy said that the incident involved a 10-year-old boy who poked at the woman's breasts and hit her in the buttocks. The staff member chose not to press charges, attorneys wrote.

• A staff member was assaulted by two children on Nov. 28, according to both reports, and again, authorities weren't notified.

Tampa Bay Academy attorneys wrote that the assault amounted to a 10-minute incident during which the same 10-year-old attempted to touch the breasts, crotch and buttocks of a staff member and then encouraged a "mildly retarded 13-year-old boy" to participate.

Again, attorneys wrote, the staff member did not want to press charges and therefore did not contact authorities.

• And finally, the Health Care Administration found that a client told Tampa Bay Academy that she had gonorrhea and HIV. Yet, she engaged in sexual activity with other clients while at the facility.

Tampa Bay Academy retorted that not only were staff members unable to substantiate claims that the girl had sex while at the center, but also that her test results for the STDs were negative.

"Clearly, children and adolescents residing in a health care facility and requiring mental health assessment and treatment services will act out," attorneys for Tampa Bay Academy wrote again and again, "but it is unreasonable to conclude that 'immediate' and 'serious' danger would be threatened to the public health, safety or welfare."

A judge has ordered the Health Care Administration to respond to Tampa Bay Academy by 2 p.m. Monday, according to a court docket.

Tallahassee attorney Karen Gievers has represented several foster children over the years who were placed in Tampa Bay Academy.

Gievers said the charges coming out of the Health Care Administration were no surprise. Child-on-child sex abuse, she said, "is the dirty secret of the foster care system," and the problem is exacerbated because programs like these are often poorly staffed by people unqualified to treat the patients.

Indeed, the Health Care Administration reported that of 36 staff members working one of the academy's seven units during one week, 21 had been there less than three months.

"There's a real question," Gievers said, "as to whether these facilities benefit children."

Times researcher John Martin and staff writers Chandra Broadwater and Letitia Stein contributed to this report. Rebecca Catalanello can be reached at rcatalanello@sptimes.com or (813) 226-3383.


[Last modified: Dec 22, 2008 12:31 PM]


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Offline Ursus

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COMMENTS for "Tampa Bay Academy denies claims of abuse"
« Reply #48 on: November 15, 2009, 11:48:51 AM »
Comments for the above article, "Tampa Bay Academy denies claims of abuse" (by Rebecca Catalanello; St. Petersburg Times; Dec. 19, 2008):


Former Staff wrote: Dec 19th, 2008 12:11 am
    TBA's Staff have been poorly trained and basically set up to work with mental children without adequate staff or proper treatment plans.
Former Employee wrote: Dec 19th, 2008 12:11 am
    I have witnessed several assaults on staff from the clients in witch case the administration was against calling the proper authorities to report the incidents. Good staff have been replaced by new staff repeatedly because of tardies and call outs.
Patrick wrote: Dec 19th, 2008 12:11 am
    I used to work at this place. It is as horrible as described. And the State did a terrible job in its reviews - most often manipulated by the people running then place into overlooking deficiencies.
Lynn wrote: Dec 19th, 2008 12:11 am
    Good job articulating the allegations and retorts! I'd like to know more about all the funding that Floridians are providing for this privately owned "business."
Jane wrote: Dec 19th, 2008 12:11 am
    I worked there for over a year. I was injured by a patient. They told me I must not have understood my TCI training. I was also told that I wasn't allow to report assualts to the police - that injuries were part of working mental health.
Kacie former reasidnet wrote: Dec 22nd, 2008 9:30 am
    i AM A FORMER RESiDENT THERE AND i WOULD HAVE TO SAY iM NOT SURPRiED THiS HAPPENED. EVEN THOUGH THE PROGRAM REALLY HELP ME. i WiSH ALL THE EMPLOYEES THAT WERE THERE FOR ME THE BEST OF LUCK!
Rose wrote: Dec 22nd, 2008 9:30 am
    We visited the center for our daughter, and it was obvious that this was not a good place. Court ordered children that are violent and have committed crimes were mixed in with those that needed psychiatric help for eating disorders and depression
Erikson hall worker wrote: Dec 22nd, 2008 9:31 am
    I worked there for 3 years. I was assaulted and was told I was not allowed to report it to authorites. A 5 yr old patient also just on the roof of my car denting it and the admin. never told me till I did some investigating myself. Blame the admin!
former resident wrote: Dec 22nd, 2008 9:31 am
    I'm sorry but I was a resident there in '95, and although there were "relationships" between "clients" the staff was very well trained to seperate the "couples" and I never heard of a sexual encounter while I was there. This place saved my life.
Former Staff wrote: Dec 22nd, 2008 9:31 am
    I have witness Staff hitting/instigating children. Most were automatic placed in "holds" instead of finding more appropriate solution for each individaul child. I made several reports to "higher ups" within TBA about staff to no avail.


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Offline Anonymous

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Re: tampa bay academy
« Reply #49 on: November 16, 2009, 12:19:09 PM »
It seems I was wrong about visitations. My friends daughter had a visit with her grandparents, and all seems to be as good as can be expected. I brought copies of those tribune articles you posted to her father. He said he wanted to wait to find out how she was doing, before he brought them for "Granny and Peepaw" to see. Hopefully she will be out in the minimum.
I hope with all that went on there last year, that they are on the DCF radar and under the microscope.
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Offline Ursus

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Re: tampa bay academy
« Reply #50 on: November 16, 2009, 01:16:14 PM »
Quote from: "none-ya"
It seems I was wrong about visitations. My friends daughter had a visit with her grandparents, and all seems to be as good as can be expected. I brought copies of those tribune articles you posted to her father. He said he wanted to wait to find out how she was doing, before he brought them for "Granny and Peepaw" to see. Hopefully she will be out in the minimum.
I hope with all that went on there last year, that they are on the DCF radar and under the microscope.
I sure hope so as well. It is, however, of more than a little concern that these types of abuses were not unique to last year alone, and that Tampa Bay Academy has tangled with oversight agencies, and been issued ultimatums, in much the same way before.

Perhaps executive director director Rich Warden, who took over just shortly before the shit really hit the fan, will make a difference. Perhaps not.

But hey, at least your friend's daughter had family over for a visit! That's a good sign.
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Offline Ursus

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Patient's parent speaks out about dangers...
« Reply #51 on: November 16, 2009, 05:56:00 PM »
While I'm rifling through the St. Petersburg Times, here's another one from them. I must say, they do dig up more details on dirt.

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Patient's parent speaks out about dangers at Tampa Bay Academy
Rebecca Catalanello, Times staff writer
In Print: Saturday, December 20, 2008


TAMPA — Sharon Meyer listened with more than passing interest this week to news that an east Hillsborough County mental health facility was being shut down by the state.

She wasn't surprised.

Her 16-year-old daughter was among those living at Tampa Bay Academy. The girl had been there a year and, at least three times, the state has investigated claims of abuse or neglect against her.

The Department of Children and Families substantiated one claim — that a staff member at the Riverview residential treatment center choked the girl.

"My daughter is coming out of there 10 times worse than when she entered," said Meyer, founder of the Foundation for Large Families, an Internet support group for adoptive parents.

Meyer offered a glimpse of what it is like for parents who, at wit's end, turn to professionals for help, only to discover even more cause for worry.

Tampa Bay Academy, one of 45 residential treatment centers in the state, is fighting to stay open in the wake of findings by the Agency for Health Care Administration that the 20-year-old facility is rife with problems that include unreported sex assaults by minors.

The Agency for Health Care Administration ordered a moratorium on admissions there and, by Friday, had moved 17 of the 54 residents, agency spokeswoman Shelisha Durden said.

Andrew Rock, an attorney for the Academy, declined to respond to Meyer's statements about the school.

Rock appealed to the 2nd District Court of Appeals on Wednesday to stop the state's efforts to close it down, arguing in part that the claims are unfounded.

"While it's under the consideration of the court, we think it's appropriate not to try to litigate it in the press," he said.

Meyer said her daughter was admitted to the program after being diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder, a condition that began manifesting itself about the age of 10. The illness eventually made it unsafe for the girl, who had been adopted at birth, to be around the other children in the family, Meyer said.

Meyer was thankful Tampa Bay Academy could help her daughter, who she believes to be a danger. At one point her daughter got into a scuffle with staff members, and one employee was punched and another pushed.

But in the time the girl has been at the facility, Meyer has had numerous occasions to question the level and quality of supervision and safety there:

• When the girl entered, she didn't have scars. Now, she has what Meyer described as nine large gashes on her arms.

• The girl became seriously ill after staff members administered Haldol to the girl, though the parents repeatedly advised it would cause an adverse reaction.

In April, the girl's father rushed to her aid and took her to an emergency room after being summoned to the campus by a staff member who said they couldn't reach any of the center's medical staff. Bob Meyer found the girl drooling and barely able to walk, a condition the parents said doctors attributed to the drug.

• Though the teenager has been there for a year, it was about five months before the family started receiving treatment reports from Tampa Bay Academy. It was six months before she started getting report cards, she said.

• Her daughter once disappeared from the facility for five hours.

• Her daughter had such easy access to medication that she repeatedly stole and took other people's prescribed drugs.

• Meyer said that on one occasion, she was advised that a former female staff member came back to the campus, kissed her daughter and told her that pictures of the girl decorate her house — a situation that prompted other staffers to intervene.

"I think it's even more widespread than they're reporting," Meyer said of the charges against the residential treatment center.

Terry Field, a DCF spokesman, said a cursory review of abuse and neglect investigations at the Academy turned up at least 30 complaints in the past year.

Though two pending 2006 lawsuits against Tampa Bay Academy allege child-on-child sex abuse at the facility, neither DCF nor the Agency for Health Care Administration said they were aware of the lawsuits until this week.

The Health Care Administration, which has been licensing state residential treatment programs since 2006, said its most recent investigation was prompted by an anonymous complaint.

State law does not require residential treatment centers to report such litigation to the licensing agency, said Health Care Administration officials Laura MacLafferty and Polly Weaver.

That's something state Sen. Ronda Storms, R-Valrico, said needs to change.

"There needs to be a thorough review — not just of this facility or of what went wrong," she said. "We need to analyze and assess the other facilities that are intensive therapy facilities. How can we prevent this in the future?"

Altogether, there are just 743 beds available in Florida for children under the age of 18 who require the level of intensive mental health care provided by residential treatment centers.

A firm number on the length of the waiting list was not available Thursday or Friday, but lawyers say the need is great.

Nancy Bostock, a Pinellas County commissioner who has personal experience navigating mental health treatment programs for kids, said the stories coming out of Tampa Bay Academy are worrisome to any parent who has felt the need to entrust their child into the care of professionals.

"Any time you put a lot of troubled kids together, you're going to have troubling behaviors," she said. "But that's why we sent our kids to (places like) Tampa Bay Academy."

Rebecca Catalanello can be reached at rcatalanello@sptimes.com or (813) 226-3383.


[Last modified: Dec 25, 2008 10:34 PM]


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Offline Ursus

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COMMENTS for "Patient's parent speaks out about dangers..."
« Reply #52 on: November 16, 2009, 05:57:19 PM »
Comments for the above article, "Patient's parent speaks out about dangers at Tampa Bay Academy" (by Rebecca Catalanello; St. Petersburg Times; Dec. 20, 2008):


Rhae wrote: Dec 21st, 2008 10:45 pm
    There is more to this story than is being told in this article. As we all know there are 2 sides to every story. If the parents named in this story were so concerned why were they not more proactive, and why has the child stayed in tx for a year?
Mike wrote: Dec 22nd, 2008 8:38 am
    Congratulations. You managed to find a few parents who have had problems with Tampa Bay Academy. Where are the parents who's kids were helped by them? Can we hear the whole story, instead of only the dirt and gossip.
diane wrote: Dec 22nd, 2008 8:39 am
    My daughter is twenty-five and was diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder at sixteen. Abuse in psychiatric facilities is a national problem. I've reported many incidences to the Office of Mental Health in New York. I feel this family's pain. HOPE
Samuel wrote: Dec 25th, 2008 7:34 am
    Every child with mental problem and sent to state homes are sexually assualted-repeatedly..until they learn to shut up and submit. Staff r usaully the assualter-child assualtee-where is Butterworth and DCF? or Sweet Charlie crist? when you need them?


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Offline Anonymous

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Re: tampa bay academy
« Reply #53 on: November 17, 2009, 07:30:32 AM »
So is that the last of the allegations? No complaints since they got thier license back in Jan.? Also I'm surprised that nobody that has actually been there has posted here.
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: tampa bay academy
« Reply #54 on: November 17, 2009, 11:01:31 AM »
The people who made comments about the article were fornits members.  This is a common tactic used to discredit programs that help kids.
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: tampa bay academy
« Reply #55 on: November 17, 2009, 12:30:43 PM »
Yea, right. And I'm sure those newspaper articles were written by fornits posters also. Get real!
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: tampa bay academy
« Reply #56 on: November 17, 2009, 12:52:42 PM »
Quote from: "none-ya"
Yea, right. And I'm sure those newspaper articles were written by fornits posters also. Get real!

There are no people who care about the articles.
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: tampa bay academy
« Reply #57 on: November 17, 2009, 01:09:21 PM »
Speak only for yourself asshole!
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Offline Ursus

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Re: tampa bay academy
« Reply #58 on: November 17, 2009, 01:14:58 PM »
Quote from: "Guest"
The people who made comments about the article were fornits members. This is a common tactic used to discredit programs that help kids.
Quote from: "none-ya"
Yea, right. And I'm sure those newspaper articles were written by fornits posters also. Get real!
Quote from: "Guest"
There are no people who care about the articles.
Commentary on the articles appears to be from folk local to and familiar with Tampa Bay Academy. Most of this coverage was approximately a year ago, long before TBA was even on fornits' radar. That has changed, thanks to none-ya.

One of the reasons for posting the articles is to get them in our database before they disappear into the pay-per-view archives. Some papers don't even have archives (generally very local community-based ones).

If you don't care to read the articles, feel free to ignore them. That is certainly your choice!  ;D
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Offline Ursus

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Re: tampa bay academy
« Reply #59 on: November 17, 2009, 01:42:30 PM »
Quote from: "none-ya"
So is that the last of the allegations? No complaints since they got thier license back in Jan.? Also I'm surprised that nobody that has actually been there has posted here.
I still have a few more St. Petersburg Times articles I'd like to post. There might be some more dirt in there, but I doubt it's anything major. Like you said earlier, TBA is really under the microscope at the moment.

As to why no one from there has posted here... could be that their market is very community-focused? And hence no one from there might think their experience applicable? Youth and Family Centered Services is not a community organization by any means, but that doesn't mean that their individual facilities aren't...

This isn't the first time Tampa Bay Academy has come up before, but previous mentions have been quite minimal:

  • Mentioned as a favorable comparison in a 2004 story regarding an Indianapolis group home for young sex offenders seeking permission to open a public charter school.
    viewtopic.php?f=9&t=6984&p=66584#p66584
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