Author Topic: Shell Shock in Southfield MI  (Read 1053 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« on: January 28, 2009, 05:18:54 PM »
Employees at PFC in Southfield report being "shell shocked". Apparently they are out of a job come Friday... Here's why:

According to John Wilhelmsen of the Michigan Department of Community Health, the Indianapolis PFC office has announced its intention to close the Southfield facility on Friday, January 30, 2009. A formal copy of this transaction should be made available for public inspection within the next 14 days.


WOW!!!!!! And just think, NO PROTEST REQUIRED!!! WOOHOO!!  :rocker:  :rocker:  :rocker:  :rocker:  :rocker:



nnnnnnnnnext!!!!!
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline wdtony

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Re: Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« Reply #1 on: January 28, 2009, 11:41:45 PM »
We need to keep an eye out so that the current program parents in Michigan don't continue the program themselves. The newcomers should be set free.

What Michigan authority could we call if the parents try to treat kids with parents as directors and other kids as staff? This should not be allowed to happen. I am also concerned that these parents might continue the "program model" out of their own host homes like in the movie, Over the GW.
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« Reply #2 on: January 29, 2009, 12:31:04 AM »
Well, if you can find the names of the current parents, then you can do all the necessary groundwork searching for the new program name and location. Have at it. The likelihood of these parents doing such a thing is quite small at this point. If they were successful in creating yet another spinoff, it would have to be originally certified and would have a very difficult time getting past the barriers created by the straight inc treatment modality. Just the simple fact that the MI PFC branch is up and leaving on a "moment's notice" should speak volumes as to its limitations, fallacies and inability to sustain itself in a full disclosure environment created by third parties and Americans in general. Besides, these parents will not have the government support that PFC has been enjoying over the years. When was the last time you saw a politician jump on the PFC bandwagon? Most of them have attempted to distance themselves from their relationship. Sheriff Lain is an exception to the rule and apparently is OK being cast on their front page. There's kid in the MI facility who was shipped from the KHK/PFC building when it closed. There are reports of other cases of lengthy stays up to 2 years and counting in MI as well. It would be safe to assume that these kids may very well be shipped to the Indy PFC. Whatever happens, it will be transpiring rather quickly over the next 48 hours or so. This should be very interesting, so please keep your eyes and ears open.
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Offline wdtony

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Re: Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« Reply #3 on: January 29, 2009, 01:25:17 AM »
Sheriff Lain has not replied to my e-mail. Maybe he is really busy.

I wonder how the PFC Michigan program parents feel about PFC spending all of that money to set up the Porter county PFC while just turning their backs on Southfield. Are Chicagoland kid's lives more important than Southfield's? No, but there is a whole lot more money in Chicagoland and if you follow the money, you can see the truth.

http://chestertontribune.com/Duneland%2 ... atment.htm

Think of all of the money that those parents have spent, only to be kicked out without notice. Maybe Terri Nissley could give back some of the 91k + she makes a year (plus business expenses and whatever else she takes) or maybe her and her husband could sell some of their investment properties that they own (Kenneth and Terri = KenTer Homes: http://www.kenterhomes.com/ ) to "save these kids lives" in Michigan. Yeah right!

I am surprised she didn't try to write off PFC Michigan as a business loss under her Amway business scam like in the past.  http://www.mlmsurvivor.com/resources/nissley.pdf

If Pathway really did care about people instead of the bottom dollar, things would be done much differently in such difficult economic times. But Pathway isn't what it claims to be and this is just more proof of how cold-blooded this fake-org. is.

Now I am happy overall that this is happening because it means that this cult won't be brainwashing in Michigan, but it is still sad that all of these Michigan families will be thrown into the real world after having become acclimated to the program world.
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« Reply #4 on: January 29, 2009, 11:18:02 AM »
Quote from: "wdtony"
Sheriff Lain has not replied to my e-mail. Maybe he is really busy.

I wonder how the PFC Michigan program parents feel about PFC spending all of that money to set up the Porter county PFC while just turning their backs on Southfield. Are Chicagoland kid's lives more important than Southfield's? No, but there is a whole lot more money in Chicagoland and if you follow the money, you can see the truth.

http://chestertontribune.com/Duneland%2 ... atment.htm

Think of all of the money that those parents have spent, only to be kicked out without notice. Maybe Terri Nissley could give back some of the 91k + she makes a year (plus business expenses and whatever else she takes) or maybe her and her husband could sell some of their investment properties that they own (Kenneth and Terri = KenTer Homes: http://www.kenterhomes.com/ ) to "save these kids lives" in Michigan. Yeah right!

I am surprised she didn't try to write off PFC Michigan as a business loss under her Amway business scam like in the past.  http://www.mlmsurvivor.com/resources/nissley.pdf

If Pathway really did care about people instead of the bottom dollar, things would be done much differently in such difficult economic times. But Pathway isn't what it claims to be and this is just more proof of how cold-blooded this fake-org. is.

Now I am happy overall that this is happening because it means that this cult won't be brainwashing in Michigan, but it is still sad that all of these Michigan families will be thrown into the real world after having become acclimated to the program world.

Thanks, this is a great post, making sound sense and providing good links.  I couldn't wade through all the court papers though.
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Offline Ursus

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Re: Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« Reply #5 on: January 29, 2009, 11:06:33 PM »
Quote from: "Moneybags"
It would be safe to assume that these kids may very well be shipped to the Indy PFC.

This would be my bet as well, unless they were super close to being "discharged" anyway.

I wonder why such short notice? Perhaps some reason that hasn't come to light yet?
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Offline Ursus

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Re: Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« Reply #6 on: January 30, 2009, 10:27:16 AM »
Detroit Free Press
Southfield substance-abuse center for teens closes
By ZLATI MEYER • FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER • January 29, 2009

A Southfield substance-abuse center for teens has closed after 16 years because of the economic downturn, leaving roughly 20 staffers without jobs and dozens of young addicts without day treatment.

Pathway Family Center, 23100 Providence, closed last Friday, a couple of months after the not-for-profit group's facility in Milford, Ohio, was shuttered, center spokeswoman Laurie Franke-Polz said today. Pathway's two other sites in Porter, Ind., and Indianapolis remain open.

"It was closed because of the economic conditions, so we'll be keeping very close tabs," she said. "We're hoping the economy will turn, so we can reopen."

She explained that Pathway, a residential program that places teens with alcohol and drug addictions with host families, saw a decrease in the number of clients. Normally, the center aids 40-50 families at a time with treatments typically lasting six to nine months, stays which insurance companies tend to partly cover.

"We're working with families very closely," Franke-Polz added. "There will be a clinical plan of care. Some of them, we'll set them up with other facilities, so their care will continue, and some will transfer to our Indianapolis site."

But for those whom the substance-abuse center helped -- like Hugh Bowman, whose son graduated from the program in 1995 and his daughter-in-law a few years later -- closing the Southfield site is disappointing.

"I'm sad to see it go because I know a lot of good things have happened through Pathway," the 67-year-old Westland resident said. "It's to be expected because Michigan is hit so hard."

Contact ZLATI MEYER at 313-223-4439 or http://thestraights.com/index.htm

Oh BTW, this article mentioned its sister facility closing in Milford, Ohio, here's a link to its closing and inside is yet another link to an investigative report that was done on these Straight, INC spin-offs:

http://www.wcpo.com/news/local/story/I- ... fd8rg.cspx

luv ya group...right..

01/30/2009 8:04:43 a.m. EDT[/list]
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Offline wdtony

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Re: Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« Reply #7 on: January 30, 2009, 04:55:13 PM »
Thanks Ursus,

I find it interesting that Porter will remain open while Southfield closes. Is this really because of the economic conditions or is it because there is a lot of money in Porter? Seems like people are staring to catch on in OH and MI and the money is drying up. Economic conditions are only one factor contributing to this program's woes.

And I'm sure the truth about their methods being provided via letter, phone and internet couldn't have had any effect on the decrease in numbers at their programs according to Pathway. Once again, the program is attempting to show an appearance instead of the truth.




"Pathway Family Center, 23100 Providence, closed last Friday, a couple of months after the not-for-profit group's facility in Milford, Ohio, was shuttered, center spokeswoman Laurie Franke-Polz said today. Pathway's two other sites in Porter, Ind., and Indianapolis remain open."

"It was closed because of the economic conditions, so we'll be keeping very close tabs," she said. "We're hoping the economy will turn, so we can reopen."

She explained that Pathway, a residential program that places teens with alcohol and drug addictions with host families, saw a decrease in the number of clients. Normally, the center aids 40-50 families at a time with treatments typically lasting six to nine months, stays which insurance companies tend to partly cover.
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« Reply #8 on: January 30, 2009, 08:13:00 PM »
Ursus, part of the reason is that the ONDCP has been pressured to renounce its unbridled support of PFC and the bogus CADC groups. Maybe some of the shit is going up the hill instead of down. Part of it is because that shit is hitting the fan faster than PFC can shovel it off. Part of it is because the program cannot withstand constant and negative oriented pressure for very long. Liability surely plays a huge role. How big these parts are is anyone's guess. If nobody ever said anything to anyone about what happens at PFC, it would still be "flourishing" like nothing ever happened. One of the most effective tools of fighting the program is to make public all facts that support the allegations. It also helps to be persistent.
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« Reply #9 on: January 30, 2009, 08:47:47 PM »
Quote from: "Oslo's Accordion"
part of the reason is that the ONDCP has been pressured to renounce its unbridled support of PFC and the bogus CADC groups. Maybe some of the shit is going up the hill instead of down. Part of it is because that shit is hitting the fan faster than PFC can shovel it off.

Who/what pressured ONDCP? What are the CADC groups?

What shit is hitting the fan?

Thank you for information.
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: Shell Shock in Southfield MI
« Reply #10 on: January 31, 2009, 12:45:14 AM »
This letter was sent to the ONDCP and several other government and news agencies throughout the country last July. It is a small yet pointed token of the combined efforts of concerned people throughout the country, many of whom are survivors of the modality used by PFC, to expose this problem. The only response from the ONDCP regarding this issue was more like a "we referred your letter to the appropriate office" type response. It was like a form letter of sorts. I do not expect that it made much of a difference to them or anyone else for that matter. It simply serves public notice that they are involved in this PFC issue. They have not denied it.

July 29, 2008

To Whom it May Concern,

Pathway Family Center (PFC) is one of the flagship adolescent drug treatment programs supported by the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP). While offering drug treatment to potential clients from all fifty states and other countries, PFC continues to physically and psychologically abuse and torture its clients on a daily basis. Numerous complaints and allegations of abuse and torture have been lodged against PFC by reputable sources including former clients and ISAC Corporation www.isaccorp.org . The licensing and accrediting agencies in the states of Arizona, Indiana, Michigan and Ohio continue to reject these complaints. This is a case of former clients broadcasting a most urgent plea to end the abuse and torture being endured by current PFC clients. It is also one in which the respective authorities are willfully denying humane treatment and justice to these adolescents.

What makes it acceptable in the United States of America to systematically abuse and torture adolescents for monetary gain? Why does PFC enjoy the recognition by the White House and the ONDCP as one of the flagship drug treatment programs for adolescents? Why does the government even allow this type of treatment to exist?

Anyone who follows the history of PFC will see that this program simply continued the drug treatment activities of STRAIGHT, Inc., after that company changed its name to the Straight Foundation. The Straight Foundation, under the leadership of Mel and Betty Sembler, who were co-founders of STRAIGHT, Inc., yet again changed its name to the Drug Free America Foundation (DFAF). By 1993, the treatment programs having the name of STRAIGHT, Inc. were erroneously reported to have been shut down in all of the states in which they did business. Licensing agencies in several states across the country required this action due to rampant claims of abuse against adolescents and young adults under the STRAIGHT, Inc. name. Later that year, former management of the STRAIGHT, Inc. facility in Michigan incorporated PFC as an outpatient drug treatment program for adolescents and it received 501c3 status from the IRS. They expanded into Indiana in 1994 and then into Ohio in 2006. Under the STRAIGHT, Inc. umbrella, other corporate name changes and shuffling of program locations have occurred. Licensing agencies throughout Michigan, Indiana and Ohio have made numerous special exceptions for PFC to ensure that the program continues unabated into the future.

Currently, the DFAF is working in conjunction with the ONDCP to promote drug prevention and awareness activities. Former STRAIGHT, Inc. executives are actively involved with these efforts. Bill Oliver, former Executive Director of STRAIGHT, Inc. sells software for creating Community Action Drug Coalitions (CADC) throughout the country via the Internet. CADC’s provide a rich environment from which clients of PFC are and can be acquired. They also work with PFC to warn parents about potential problems their children may have with drugs. In Indiana, at least one CADC provided PFC with large sums of money through solicited donations and lobbied for appropriations from Porter County taxpayers.

PFC operates adolescent drug treatment programs in Michigan, Indiana and one that is a “locked facility” in Milford Ohio. The Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services (ODADAS) currently licenses their Ohio facility. The PFC programs are accredited by the Arizona based Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF). John Walters, who is the director of the ONDCP, along with a graduate of PFC shared a photo-op with President Bush in the White House at the end of 2007. This meeting took place during the ONDCP National Inhalants and Poison Awareness Week campaign.

Any drug treatment program that uses the STRAIGHT, Inc. treatment modality should be required to cease this activity. It has been linked to documented cases of PTSD, numerous life-long negative physical and emotional side effects including both suicide and attempted suicide, divorce, and overall acute family dysfunction.

It is time for the agencies charged with enforcing rules, statutes, codes, and policies to do a more thorough job and permanently shut down this program. These respective agencies have been ignoring complaints, denying agency responsibility and jurisdiction, and granting special exceptions to PFC for many years. No child should be abused in the name of treatment.

How this issue will be resolved remains to be seen. It is my hope that it will be sooner than later.

Sincerely,

William Earnshaw, Sr.
President, ISAC Corporation
www.isaccorp.org



The shit that is hitting the fan is all over the internet. It's too much to list right at the moment, but here's a link to current really stinky stuff:

http://pathwayfamilycenter.fornits.com/
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