Fornits
Treatment Abuse, Behavior Modification, Thought Reform => The Troubled Teen Industry => Topic started by: PFRR on September 15, 2004, 06:00:00 PM
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Associated with Casa and are out of the Country? What are their names and where are they? Also the same with the boot camps...
Does anyone know.. ? :question:
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Non-WWASP programs, in the US? here must be thousands of them.
And, just because it's not WWASP, doesn't mean it's not abusive. There are many hell holes out there, and too many people in this industry.
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You've got your work cut out for you, PFRR. One name that's been discussed here for some time is Abundant Life Accademy. I've read somewhere that it's changed location within Mx again recently and that they've set up a location in the Chzeck Republic. I suppose you could go trolling through the edcon websites asking about offshore programs to get some more names. But your list will never be complete or accurate. When these places start to draw fire, they change names, locations and shuffle ownership papers to obfuscate.
Being sleepy can impair someone's ability to do thier job. People
can sleep at home and come to the job with sleepiness still in their system. The sleepiness can still be there long after the employee has slept. When someone is found to be sleepy on the job, they can claim that they went to sleep the night before. The only solution to this problem is to ban employees from sleeping.
--Arthur Slabosky
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Positive Impact is another
http://fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?to ... m=9&Sort=D (http://fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?topic=5243&forum=9&Sort=D)If you want a voluntary urine sample from me it'll have to be a taste test.
--Bumper Sticker
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There are about 200 facilities in Utah alone. The supervisor of licensing of facilities did not even know how many there were. When I spoke to him he said there were about 60....
For something that has spread with all the forethought of kudzu, the Internet isn't half bad."
-- Newsweek, 2/27/95
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What we are finding out just with the US programs is there is no regulatory standard across the Country. Here in MA they must license with the Office of Child Care Services or can't do business, the standards are okay, better and higher than most states, then if they take special education students must be approved by DOE as a private special education school and the standards there are also high much higher than 6 years ago. But across the country all programs, placements, and oversight is different, enough to make someone dizzy. We were involved with DeSisto I admit that I wrote the initial letter of complaint to the state because they were operating and were not licensed. After being taken to court they were ordered to license, still didn't meet the standards although I thought they were on their way, had a major major incident the one that topped the cake, packed up the kids, closed down shop, and went to Mexico on some property they had there. They are still their also, and really I tried to find out about oversight in these horrific places out side of the country to no avail. There isn't any. What parent would send their child out of the country with no standards to be met, no way for recourse if something goes wrong. I just don't get it....
:scared:
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On 2004-09-15 19:35:00, PFRR wrote:
There isn't any. What parent would send their child out of the country with no standards to be met, no way for recourse if something goes wrong. I just don't get it....
Total suckers; the kind of people who buy weightloss pills advertised on latenight tv.Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.
Thomas Jefferson, 1787
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How did you come up with the number 200? Not that I doubt you just want to know source for article.
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Search for facilities here:
http://168.177.185.32/lists.asp (http://168.177.185.32/lists.asp)
Regulations here:
http://168.177.185.32/rules-forms.htm (http://168.177.185.32/rules-forms.htm)
And don't forget the link to Utah's promotion of Wilderness programs:
http://www.das.state.ut.us/cc/dec2002/wilderness.htm (http://www.das.state.ut.us/cc/dec2002/wilderness.htm)
http://www.das.state.ut.us/cc/dec2002/wilderness2.htm (http://www.das.state.ut.us/cc/dec2002/wilderness2.htm)
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thanks. won't forget to include wilderness programs.
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Beats me I don't get it at all.
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Is there anyone out there who knows how to find out where a child has been sent. P.I.'s, hackers, spies, etc?
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if the child has been sent by a government agency as a juvenile offender, contact the state that sent them. otherwise each program has a roster of all the kids there and you can ask the state to check each one to see if the kid is there.
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Ask the parents??
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On 2004-11-08 09:05:00, granny19 wrote:
"Is there anyone out there who knows how to find out where a child has been sent. P.I.'s, hackers, spies, etc? "
Have a PI or a friend meet one of the parents "coincidentally" and pose as a parent of a troubled teen: start bitching, as if venting, about all the trouble she's having with her kid. Try to get troubles that are sort of similar but not suspiciously the same as the teen you're trying to find. Have your actor/actress just play it out, being open to possible solutions or advice.
Most places give parents kickbacks for referrals. If your actress is any good, the parent should jump at the chance of getting that referral break on tuition. Pick the dumber parent to run into. You may want to do this with a professional PI, because the PI has probably already honed his/her acting skills and is probably not a total idjit--it's up to you to hire one that's not stupid, anyway.
Your targeted parent makes the referral, the PI is polite and thankful and is going to look into it, and gets their information to put on the referral form, and suddenly you know *exactly* where your target kid is.
You've got your information, and without breaking any laws, as long as you aren't already under a restraining order for harrassment or something.
Since the dumber parent freely offers the information to someone he/she barely knows, there's no invasion of privacy issue. If the parents have never warned you to stop contacting them or done anything to trigger harrassment law provisions, you're clear on that, too.
Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer. This is not specific legal advice. If you feel you may need legal advice, contact an attorney in your area. Some private investigators may be too lousy to pull this off. There may be some local law where you are that makes this illegal.
But in my layman's understanding of the law, you can (or your PI can) lie to someone in a casual conversation to get information from them without breaking any laws.
If you do this right, and you don't tell anyone you're going to do it or that you've done it, and you pay the PI cash and meet him/her in person instead of discussing the case over a phone or where you might be overheard, nobody but you and the PI ever needs to know you did it.
As far as the parents are concerned, they gave some helpful advice to a fellow troubled parent who just never followed up on it.
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If I was doing this, I'd have my PI run into the parents somewhere they'd be waiting for awhile--like a doctor's waiting room, or a pharmacy getting a prescription filled, or waiting for a car repair. Since some of those things may be hard to predict, one sure-fire would be to have the PI start attending the parents' church under a fake identity, or join the parents' hobby or social club, or become a regular in the same restaurant or bar, or contrive to be next to them in a busy grocery line.
Maybe fake up a cell phone call to the fictional annoying kid where the "parent" (PI) is scolding the kid and hangs up and uses the apparently just-happened phone call as a natural trigger to start venting to the person standing right next to her----your targetted parent.
Your biggest expense would be the time the PI would have to take getting close to the target.
People who are afraid they did the wrong thing and desperately want to believe they did the right thing, as well as who have a financial interest, tend to get evangelical in their fervor and like to share their strong opinion about how what they did was right and other people should do it too. If your PI is even a halfway decent actor, the parents should bite. From the defensive desire to justify themselves and get some strokes and empathy even if their particular teen facility *doesn't* offer kickbacks they'll probably bite.
I am not blind to the irony about people being fervent and evangelical about their hot button issues. :smile:
Still, I think one of the reasonable checks and balances on parental authority in society is that blood kin that are close enough to potentially sue for custody, like a grandparent, have a right to know if the kid is sent to a facility, and which facility, because they have a reasonable, genuine, pro-social interest in the child's health and well-being.
Sometimes a child will really need residential treatment and the relatives will be wrong to disapprove.
Sometimes a child's parents will place the child in a poor-quality facility or one that is extremely inappropriate to the child's needs and the child's other blood relatives are the only *reasonable* people with standing to bring the problem to the attention of the family courts and child welfare system.
I don't know which this is, but if you have asked the parents once (or aren't on speaking terms with them), and this is your grandchild you're talking about, it's reasonable for you to use a PI as described to get the name of the facility so you can check on it and see if it's a necessary and appropriate placement, or if you need to hire an attorney and get the family courts or child welfare officials involved.
Once your PI has found the name of the facility, contact ISAC (google them) to get more information on whether you maybe should pursue this with the courts, or maybe seek some mediation with the parents, or leave it alone, or whatever action or lack of action is most appropriate to your situation and is in the best interests of the child.
Timoclea
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http://www.strugglingteens.com/archives ... 411np.html (http://www.strugglingteens.com/archives/2004/11/whiteriveradv0411np.html)
WHITE RIVER ADVENTURE
Rio Grande, Puerto Rico
Randall Hinton and Justin Nielson - Co-Founders
White River Adventure is a therapeutic boarding school for defiant boys ages 13-17. The program is a military style teen boarding school, where the boys must complete several levels of training over the course of one year. White River Adventure offers: Academics, Health and Therapy, Family Support, Self-Esteem Building, Positive Peer Culture (PPC), and Recreation Therapy.
Students begin the program on stage one and are required to complete four stages of morality in order to graduate. White River separates the boys into 'families' of students according to their common needs and issues, and they must attend daily PPC group sessions, within these 'families.' Rewards and advancement are part of the PPC program, which also provides an opportunity for "consistent trust and integrity among students." Individual Therapy is available as often as necessary to be "productive and successful in the various issues the students face."
The school has a large, fully trained staff to supervise the boys, and certified teachers assist them in an academic independent study program. The boys study with others at their educational skill level, and are encouraged to achieve their personal academic goals.
For boys who don't need long-term residential placement, White River Adventure also offers a 60-90 day Wake up Call Program where boys participate in a rigorous daily schedule consisting of emotional growth, PPC group sessions, self-esteem building, goal setting and goal review sessions, service projects, daily chores, life skills and independent living such as cooking and cleaning. Students may also participate in Individual Therapy at an additional cost. Accredited Academics are unavailable in the short-term wake up call programs, but the boys are in class six days a week to sharpen academic skills in many of the basic courses like Math, Science, English, History and more.
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Sure. Nice place to drop an ad. Jerk.
I think this is an appropriate place and time to mention that a whole hell of a lot of Programs have had to settle lawsuits with families for fraud for advertising one thing and delivering something completely and horrifyingly substandard to what was promised.
Caveat Emptor!!!! Let the buyer be very, very wary.
Timoclea