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31
http://edlabor.house.gov/newsroom/2009/ ... e-le.shtml

House Education and Labor Committee will consider legislation on Wednesday

February 9, 2009 2:58 PM

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Reps. George Miller (D-CA) and Carolyn McCarthy (D-NY) today reintroduced legislation to protect teenagers attending residential treatment programs from physical, mental and sexual abuse and to prevent deceptive marketing practices by operators of private residential programs for teens. The lawmakers also announced that the House Education and Labor Committee will mark up the legislation on Wednesday.

Investigations conducted by the Government Accountability Office during the 110th Congress at the lawmakers’ request have uncovered thousands of cases and allegations of child abuse and neglect since the early 1990’s at teen residential programs, including therapeutic boarding schools, boot camps, wilderness programs and behavior modification facilities. Currently, these programs are governed only by a weak patchwork of state and federal standards. A separate GAO report, also conducted last year at the committee’s request, found major gaps in the licensing and oversight of residential programs – some of which are not covered by any state licensing standards at all.

In addition, the GAO’s investigation revealed that many teen residential treatment programs have been using deceptive marketing practices and questionable tactics to lure vulnerable parents desperate to find help for their children.

“For far too long, these abuses, neglect and mistreatment of children – some of the most horrific violations of trust imaginable – have been allowed to go on completely unchecked,” said Miller, the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee. “Parents deserve every assurance that their children will be safe and protected when attending a program intended to help improve their lives.”

"It is no doubt a painful and difficult decision for parents to send their children to residential treatment facilities and the last thing they should have to worry about is the possibility of unknowingly putting their kids in harms way,” said McCarthy, chairwoman of the Healthy Families and Communities subcommittee. “It is crucial that federal standards are set in place to prevent the abuse, neglect and deceptive marking practices that have devastated so many children and families.”

To address these problems, the Stop Child Abuse in Residential Programs for Teens Act of 2009, would:

    * Establish, for the first time, minimum federal standards for preventing child abuse and neglect at teen residential programs. The bill would require the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to inspect all programs around the country every two years and to issue civil penalties against programs that violate the new standards. The bill also calls for states, within three years, to take on the role of setting and enforcing standards for both private and public youth residential programs.
    * Strengthen protections for children attending these programs. The bill would require programs to provide children with adequate food, water, medical care and rest.
    * Ensure that programs are transparent and provide parents with information about teen residential programs that enable them to make safe choices for their teenagers. The legislation would create a toll-free national hotline for individuals to report cases of abuse and a website with information about substantiated cases of abuse at residential programs, including programs locations, owners, and history of violations and child fatalities. Programs would also be required to inform parents of their staff members’ qualifications, roles and responsibilities.

 
The House passed similar legislation last June by a bipartisan vote of 318 to 103, with the support of the American Association of Children’s Residential Centers, American Bar Association, American Academy of Pediatrics, American Psychological Association, the Child Welfare League of America, Children’s Defense Fund, Easter Seals, Mental Health America, the National Child Abuse Coalition and many other organizations.

For more information on this legislation, click here.

For more information on the committee’s past hearings on these abuses, at which GAO released its reports, click here.

# # #

For Press Inquiries
Contact: Aaron Albright / Melissa Salmanowitz
2181 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
202-226-0853

More exposure!  Woo hoo!

32
I would comment on the site, but they don't seem to want to let me register to do so. This is frustrating.

33
Good job on responding... i just reread the article and noticed they wrote an appearance on Oprah is planned.  This will lend legitimacy to her... this is horrible news. Oprah needs to be alerted from all over the globe. Geez! I can not stand sociopaths.... :soapbox: Having Sue Scheff be an advocated for parents of troubled teens is like appointing Hitler as an advocate for the jews!  ok, i'm done.  :bs:

34
:guesswho: In case anyone feels the need to weigh in on this article....

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/broward ... 09862.html

12/14/08 -  PARENTING
Weston mother helps other parents
Local writer Sue Scheff has rapidly gained fame as an expert on dealing with troubled teens.

By JULIE LEVIN
Special to The Miami Herald

When Sue Scheff was at the end of her rope trying to deal with her own out-of-control teenager, she admits she never could have imagined a time when she would become a leading voice in the field of parent advocacy.

Yet the Weston author is rapidly becoming a familiar face in the national spotlight speaking about just that.

''I never went into this to become a national voice or figure, but that is what I have become,'' said Scheff, author of Wit's End: Advice and Resources for Saving Your Out of Control Teen.

Scheff appeared last month on the Lifetime Network's daily television series The Balancing Act during an episode entitled ``Plain Talk and Straight Answers for Parents with Troubled Teens.''

A taping with the Oprah Winfrey show also is planned.

Wit's End, a 168-page book released earlier this year, is a tool for parents navigating the choices and methods available to help struggling teens.

Scheff, now a full-time parent advocate, said she wrote the book not as an expert or therapist but as a parent who endured a long and painful experience trying to help her daughter, Ashlyn.

Almost a decade ago, she watched her child go from promising athlete to troubled teen, repeatedly running away, being verbally abusive and having serious problems at home and school.

With no experience or help to fall back on, she enrolled Ashlyn in a residential treatment facility that wouldn't allow her contact with her daughter for six months.

She would later learn her daughter endured months of beatings, sexual abuse, starvation and neglect.

''It nearly destroyed her,'' Scheff said. ``It took us two years to deprogram her after what they had done.''

The experience led Scheff to her new purpose. She founded a group called PURE, or Parents Universal Resource Experts, which she said has served thousands as a parent advocacy group.

Through Wit's End, she provides parents with resources to help them sort out and evaluate treatment options, including therapeutic boarding schools and treatment centers.

''You step into an arena of teen help and you are bombarded with a barrage of information,'' she said. ``This is one way to help sort it out.''

In her newfound role as advocate, Scheff also has appeared nationally on the ABC news magazine program 20/20, The Morning Show with Mike and Juliet and Rachael Ray, among others.

Ashlyn, now 23, has seemingly rebounded and gone on to coaching gymnastics and becoming a mother herself.

Scheff said she would like their story to provide a light for other families.

''I think any parent out there struggling with a teen right now, you don't see the hope and you don't think you will ever come out of it. I didn't think I would,'' she said. ```But now I look back and see all those dark times have actually helped others.''

For information, visit http://www.suescheff.net.

The only comment there right now is:  Comment:  1      Showing:

    * [@Nyx.AdditionalAuthorInfo@]
      debdavie wrote on 12/14/2008 09:28:50 PM:

      wow! finally some good info! thanks!. i have read this book and love it. i would love to meet this woman. we need more people like her. she has provided that light for not only me but the friends i have who are dealing with alot of the same stuff. I hope to see more articles on these issues and these kind of people who are doing something.. for sure the corruption of this country will be when good people do nothing. thanks so much Deb

35
very cool.... Sounds like we might actually get further than we have in past attempts.... kudos to the techies!!!! yay! :rocker:  :tup:

36
Research Banditos / Re: 3 Springs Research Project-Active
« on: December 13, 2008, 09:31:38 PM »
Montgomery Advertiser (AL)-January 17, 2003
(excerpt)  

 MONTGOMERY. ALA
       
        Hanged boy case
       
        settled by mother
       
        The mother of a 14-year-old boy who was found hanged in state custody at a juvenile lockup in Tuskegee has settled with a private company in a lawsuit claiming her son's death was the result of inadequate supervision.
       
        Louisa Dunn, the mother of Dionte Pickens, reached the settlement with Huntsville-based Three Springs Inc. and four employees of the company, which contracts with the state for two juvenile treatment facilities, said Dunn's attorney, Wendy Crew.
       
        Pickens had been locked up in Tuscaloosa for truancy when Crew said he was transferred to Tuskegee without his mother being informed.

37
Research Banditos / Re: 3 Springs Research Project-Active
« on: December 13, 2008, 09:26:18 PM »
==================================================
ALABAMA TEENAGER'S DEATH RAISES QUESTIONS ABOUT PRIVATELY-RUN CARE ==================================================
Watertown Daily Times (NY)-September 14, 2001
Author: Associated Press

        When Dionte Pickens' body was found, it was hanging in a closet of a juvenile lockup, a black leather belt looped around the 14-year-old's neck.
       
        His mother believes that her child's death last October - whether a suicide or a murder - was the result of inadequate supervision at the for-profit Three Springs detention center in Tuskegee. A lawsuit contends Pickens died while his designated supervisor was playing a video game.
       
        The death and the lawsuit have raised questions about the treatment of juveniles at the center, run by Huntsville-based Three Springs Inc., which operates 21 juvenile programs in Alabama and six other states.
       
        The state's welfare agency has removed about a dozen teens who were assigned there, but the state Department of Youth Services has 25 juveniles at the Tuskegee site and 49 at a center Three Springs operates in Madison.
       
        The state deputy chief medical examiner concluded - after an autopsy and an investigation - that Pickens' death in the cinderblock room was a suicide.
       
        The Alabama Bureau of Investigation referred its investigation report on Pickens' death to the Macon County District Attorney's Office. Deputy District Attorney Kenneth Gibbs said an investigation was continuing.
       
        Several privately run facilities that treat young offenders have been criticized for poor supervision and management in several states, including centers in Colorado and Louisiana.
       
        Wendy Brooks Crew, a lawyer for Pickens' mother, said Pickens had been locked up in Tuscaloosa for truancy when he was transferred hundreds of miles to the Three Springs center at Tuskegee. Crew said Pickens' mother was not informed in advance about the transfer.
       
        The medical examiner said the body of the teen was discovered in a bedroom closet adjacent to a common room used by about 20 other teenagers.
       
        Pickens' mother, Louisa Dunn, claims Three Springs Inc., which is paid $121.50 a day for each of the youngsters assigned to the state it keeps in Tuskegee, either allowed Pickens to be murdered by hanging or allowed him to commit suicide.
       
        The suit contends that a doctor at Three Springs had recommended within three days of Pickens arrival that he have a psychological evaluation as soon as possible.
       
        Instead, Pickens was "housed in a room with non-breakaway hardware" and allowed to have a belt, Crew said. Pickens never received a psychological evaluation and his death was more than a month after his arrival, she said.
       
        Three Springs knew that Pickens, who was taking anti-depressant and psychotropic medication, had previously attempted suicide, Crew said.
       
        "When he was on his medication he did very well," Crew said. "When he was off his medication he was difficult for his mother to control."
       
        Three Springs attorney Marc Givhan said the company is saddened by the death, but would not comment beyond that.
       
        While the state continues to use the Tuskegee facility, state Human Resources Commissioner Bill Fuller said that after he heard about Pickens' death, he removed all of the "12 or 13" abused and neglected teens who were assigned there.
       
        "The atmosphere was generally oppressive for my children," Fuller said. "My primary reason was not the recent death so much as the physical conditions that my boys were exposed to day-to-day, a confinement atmosphere."
       
        State Department of Youth Services spokesman Allen Peaton said records of all 1,100 of its detainees in state and corporate-owned lockups are confidential, even after a death.
       
        As for Pickens' history with law enforcement, Crew said, "It is my understanding he had no charges other than misdemeanors and what are called status offenses."
     

Section: National News
Page: 3
Copyright (c) 2001 Watertown Daily Times

38
Open Free for All / 'Santa Bob' admits he grew wacky weed and 'shrooms
« on: December 11, 2008, 12:56:20 PM »
http://www.wtop.com/?nid=25&sid=1545911  I just had to post this.... There's got to be some good jokes dormant in this headline.... ;)

39
Research Banditos / Re: 3 Springs Research Project-Active
« on: December 09, 2008, 11:56:56 AM »
==================================================
Teen's death raises questions about care of juveniles ==================================================
Mobile Register (AL)-August 27, 2001
Author: BILL POOVEY, Associated Press Writer

        Teen's death raises questions about care of juveniles  In lawsuit, mother contends 14-year-old might have been murdered at Tuskegee detention center   By BILL POOVEY  Associated Press Writer  TUSKEGEE - Fourteen-year-old Dionte Pickens of Tuscaloosa died in state custody at a juvenile lockup, a black leather belt looped over a closet clothes rod and around his neck.
       
        The teen-ager's mother contends in a lawsuit that her child possibly was murdered in the dark by another detainee at the Three Springs detention center in Tuskegee.
       
        The death and the lawsuit have raised questions about the treatment of juveniles at the center, which is run by Huntsville-based Three Springs Inc. The state's welfare agency has removed about a dozen teens who were assigned there, but the state Department of Youth Services has 25 juveniles at the Tuskegee site and 49 at a center Three Springs operates at Madison.
       
        The company operates a total of 21 juvenile programs in Alabama and six other states.
       
        Wendy Brooks Crew, a lawyer for Pickens' mother, said Pickens had been locked up in Tuscaloosa for truancy when he was transferred hundreds of miles to the Three Springs center at Tuskegee. Crew said Pickens' mother was not informed in advance about the transfer.
       
        The lawsuit contends that Pickens' Oct. 15, 2000, death was due to inadequate supervision and that his designated supervisor was playing a video game when Pickens died. A medical examiner said the body was discovered in a bedroom closet about 9 p.m., with the bedroom adjacent to a common room used by about 20 other teen-agers.
       
        Three Springs knew that Pickens, who was taking anti-depressant and psychotropic medication, had previously attempted suicide, Crew said.
       
        The suit claims Three Springs Inc., which is paid $121.50 a day for each of the 25 DYS youths it keeps in Tuskegee, either allowed Pickens to be murdered by hanging or allowed him to commit suicide.
       
        A Three Springs employee said Pickens was murdered, Crew said.
       
        The state deputy chief medical examiner who was called and arrived at Three Springs about 12:30 a.m. on Oct. 16, 2000, concluded after observing Pickens' body in the cinderblock room and following an investigation and autopsy that the death was a suicide.
       
        DYS spokesman Allen Peaton said records of all 1,100 DYS detainees in state and corporate-owned lockups are confidential, even after a death. He also said DYS officials could not discuss Pickens' case because of the lawsuit.
       
        "A priority of DYS is to place all 1,100 youths in our custody in safe and appropriate placements," Peaton said.
       
        The Alabama Bureau of Investigation referred its investigation report on Pickens' death to the Macon County District Attorney's Office. Deputy District Attorney Kenneth Gibbs said his office has reviewed the report. He said an investigation was continuing. Gibbs declined to say if his office has reached a conclusion about Pickens' death being a suicide.
       
        Three Springs executives referred questions to their attorney, Marc Givhan of Birmingham, who issued a statement: "The entire Three Springs organization is saddened by the death of this young man. Because this matter is in litigation, it is inappropriate for us to comment further."
       
        The suit contends that a doctor at Three Springs had recommended within three days of Pickens arrival that he have a psychological evaluation as soon as possible but Pickens was instead "housed in a room with nonbreakaway hardware" and allowed to have a belt.
       
        Crew said Pickens never received a psychological evaluation and his death was more than a month after his arrival at Three Springs.
       
        While DYS continues to use the Three Springs Tuskegee Secure Program, state Human Resources Commissioner Bill Fuller said that after he heard about Pickens' death last fall he removed all of the "12 or 13" abused and neglected teens in his department's custody who were assigned there.
       
        "We had heard that a DYS child died of unexplained causes at the same site," Fuller said. "We were aware of that then and that was a factor" in moving them.
       
        Fuller said the teens in DHR custody "each had their own youthful opinions" about how Pickens died.
       
        "The atmosphere was generally oppressive for my children," Fuller said. "My primary reason was not the recent death so much as the physical conditions that my boys were exposed to day-to-day, a confinement atmosphere."
       
        Crew said Pickens' mother, Louisa Dunn, is divorced from his father.
       
        "When he was on his medication he did very well," Crew said. "When he was off his medication he was difficult for his mother to control."
       
        She said Pickens was supposed to be starting 10th grade.
       
        "It is my understanding he had no charges other than misdemeanors and what are called status offenses," Crew said. "He had problems at school, truancy ... couldn't focus and couldn't concentrate."
       
        Pickens' juvenile court officer, Thomas Snoddy, did not return telephone messages seeking comment. JUVENILES IN CUSTODY  The Alabama Department of Youth Services has a total of about 1,100 juveniles in custody, including about 208 girls. The contract lockups, number of beds they provide for state detainees and state's daily cost for each:
       
        Alabama Clinical Schools at Birmingham: about 25 beds for male sex offenders, $145.35.
       
        Three Springs Inc. at Tuskegee: about 25 beds, $121.50.
       
        Three Springs Inc. at Madison: about 49 beds, $123.50.
       
        Eufaula Youth Facility operated by First Corrections Corp. of Norfolk, Va.: about 90 beds, $90.50.
       
        Big Brothers in Dothan community group homes for boys: about eight beds, $77.
       
        Alabama Youth Home in Westover: about 12 beds, $74.
       
        Alabama Youth Home in Wetumpka: about 12 beds, $74.
       
        The Bridge Inc. girls' home at Decatur: about eight beds, $70.
       
        West Alabama Youth Services Inc. at Greensboro: about eight beds for girls, $70.
       
        Dorothy's House in Dothan: about eight beds for girls, $75.57.
       
        The Bridge Wilderness boot camp for males at Gadsden: about 24 beds, $72.
       
        The Bridge drug and alcohol treatment program for boys at Gadsden: about 24 beds, $82.
       
        The Bridge drug and alcohol treatment program for boys at Mobile: about 40 beds, $82.
       
        The Bridge boot camp-wilderness program at Gadsden for girls: about 24 beds, $72.
       
        Lee County Youth Development Center female boot camp-wilderness program for girls: about 16 beds, $80.
       
        Oak Mountain Youth Services alcohol-drug interdiction program: about 24 beds for boys, $91.
       
        Ramsey Youth Services Inc. for special needs boys: about 12 beds, $135.45. The state's average daily cost for each juvenile at the DYS Mount Meigs, Roebuck and Chalkville campuses is $137. State-operated boot camps in Autauga County and Thomasville are about $92. State-operated group homes at Gadsden, Mobile, Montgomery, Florence and Troy are $70-$80. Source: Alabama Department of Youth Services   PHOTO  DAVE MARTIN /Associated Press     Fourteen-year-old Dionte Pickens of Tuscaloosa died in state custody at the Three Springs detention center, above, in Tuskegee, Ala. A black leather belt was looped over a closet clothes rod and around the teen-ager's neck. His mother contends in a lawsuit that her child was possibly murdered by another detainee at the center.
     

Page B-1

Copyright 2001, Mobile Register.  All Rights Reserved.

40
Research Banditos / Re: 3 Springs Research Project-Active
« on: December 09, 2008, 11:53:58 AM »
============================
Private girls' school to open in September
      -
      Auldern Academy is designed particularly to help high schoolers with self-esteem problems ==================================================
Chapel Hill Herald (NC)-August 1, 2001
NEIL OFFEN www.threesprings.com
     
Edition: Final
Section: Front
Page: 1

Copyright, 2001, The Durham Herald Company

41
Research Banditos / Re: 3 Springs Research Project-Active
« on: December 09, 2008, 11:43:27 AM »
==================================================
FACILITY TO TREAT TEEN SEX OFFENDERS
==================================================
Daytona Beach News-Journal (FL)-April 22, 1999
by Valerie Whitney
     
        A former juvenile boot camp on Indian Lake Road is about to become a locked treatment center for 30 teen-age sex offenders.
       
        Three Springs Inc., a private therapeutic company based in Huntsville, Ala., will operate the residential facility under a three- year contract with the state for $1.6 million a year, a company spokesman said.
       
        The residents, who will be committed there by the courts, will be 30 male youths ranging in age from 13 to 18 and drawn from across northern Florida.
       
        The camp most recently housed a girl's treatment program operated by Stewart- Marchman Center. The boys will start being admitted this summer, said Paul Summers, group administrator for Three Springs.
       
        Janet Abee, manager of the state's Juvenile Justice Department for District 12, an area that includes Volusia County, said a contract with Three Springs will be signed within the next couple of weeks. However, the company already has begun recruiting psychologists, counselors, case workers, coaches and others for the unit. Job interviews start Monday.
       
        Abee said the Daytona Beach site was chosen because a vacant high-security facility already existed on the property. The facility opened in November 1995, but the Volusia County Sheriff's Office closed the boot camp in February 1997, citing a lack of state funds to run it.
       
        "Normally when we send out a request for proposals, the program can be sited anywhere," Abee said.
       
        However, in this case, state officials informed contractors about the boot camp, which was originally designed to house high-risk male offenders. The girls who had been housed there were not considered to be true high risks and have been transferred to Stewart-Marchman's complex at Tiger Bay.
       
        "It kind of just made it a natural place" to house the program, she said. The program will draw from a six-district region that stretches from Pensacola to Jacksonville and also includes Ocala and Gainesville, as well as Volusia and Flagler counties.
       
        "And, of course, we have our own share of sex offenders in this area," Abee said.
       
        The location will be convenient to visit for families of area youths confined there, she added. The state's other facility for youthful sex offenders is in Broward County.
       
        The project is Three Springs' first contract in Florida. The company's marketing slogan  "Helping troubled children discover lasting solutions" reflects its rehabilitation philosophy.
       
        A lot of people don't understand sex offenders. This is something that can be treated," Summers said.
       
        He said Three Springs staffers from a similar program the company operates in Courtland, Ala., will be brought in to help get the program up and running. "This is not something new to us," he said.
       
        The facility is expected to create 45 to 50 jobs, with a monthly payroll around $100,000.
       
        The company operates 23 programs  16 for boys and seven for girls  for youthful offenders in seven states. Some programs are correctional programs and others deal with mental health issues.
       
        Those sent to Three Springs of Daytona Beach  the most likely name of the center  will be confined there for a full year.
       
        Once the 30 beds are filled, the camp will not accept any additional residents. All of the things the teens will need, including schooling, will be provided for them on the property, he said.
       
        A 12-foot barbed wire fence surrounds the site, which is off U.S. 92, several miles west of Interstate 95. Summer said officials are planning to add additional security features.
     
FLORIDANews-Journal
Page: 1C

Copyright (c) 1999 Daytona Beach News-Journal

42
Research Banditos / Re: 3 Springs Research Project-Active
« on: December 09, 2008, 11:41:20 AM »
==================================================
Even an escape is a lesson    One boy said his escape made him realize how he had violated the trust of a    staff member
==================================================
Mobile Register (AL)-May 7, 1998
Associated Press

   MADISON, Ala. A state-subsidized private juvenile facility went to work repairing its tarnished image after four boys scaled a fence and fled a campus work detail.
       
        Some media reports on the April 22 incident described the campus as a ``jail,'' bringing a sharp reaction from the facility's operators, who call it a school.
       
        ``We've got adults and kids working so hard to change goals and attitudes. We just took a beating by this kind of thing,'' said Mike Watson, the president and chief executive of Three Springs, Inc., which runs the campus in Madison.
       
        The missing boys were caught Thursday and returned to Three Springs, said administrator Paul Summer.
       
        One of the boys who escaped told a Huntsville Times reporter that he saw it as a challenge to try to get out. He said he was surprised at the reception he got when he returned.
       
        ``Well, I thought I might get sent somewhere else,'' he said. ``But they brought us back. And really the worst thing was having everyone look at you like, `I can't believe you did this. You let us down.'''
       
        ``The hardest was one of the ladies on the staff wouldn't talk to me for two weeks.,'' he said. `'I just finally got to talk to her last night. It made me realize how much I had violated their trust.''
       
        Three Springs operates 18 facilities in six states. Some are correctional, like the campus in Madison. The state pays the company from $125 to $130 a day per resident, about what it costs to house an offender in a state youth facility, Summer said.
       
        ``We want these walls and fences to serve as a blanket while these kids have a chance to change,'' he said. ``That's the idea, to protect them as much as the community, and give them a chance.''
       
        The youths sent here by the Alabama Department of Youth Services are considered medium-risk, medium-needs offenders, meaning they have committed crimes like forgery, theft, smoking marijuana or second-degree assault. Almost all have served time in other state facilities.
       
        Three Springs has been operating the school in Madison for about two years, putting about 200 boys through the paces of a positive-thinking, responsibility-taking program.
       
        The boys, with closely cropped hair and punctuating speech with ``ma'am'' and ``sir,'' voice the cadence ``one, sir,'' ``two, sir,'' ``three, sir'' as they walk down the hall.
       
        A chart on a wall lists the program goals and stages and the students who have progressed to each unit.
       
        Program director Leon Thomas said, ``This is not a place where they can walk in the door, do their time and walk out. It's not just a holding cell.''
       
        Those short-tempered youths who violate rules or cause problems may face a couple of hours or even three days in a segregation cell apart from the other 56 boys. Except for the segregation area and the high fences around the courtyard, the campus looks much like a small school.
       
        In the shop room, the boys make picnic tables to sell. They donated some to a children's playground last year. The computer lab is equipped with programs in math, English, science and other subjects to keep the boys up with their regular classes. Many of the students are studying for their general equivalency diplomas.
       
        They also participate in group sessions to talk about problems and work through levels of community thinking.
       
        To progress through the program, each student has to present a program to his group about his crime and his perspective of the circumstances leading to it.
       
        ``We have to get them to a point of having a realistic self-image,'' Summer said. ``They have low self-esteem. They swagger, but in truth, they could hide behind a Dixie cup. ''
     
Edition: AM
Section: B
Page: 7

Copyright 1998, Mobile Register.  All Rights Reserved.

43
Research Banditos / Re: Aspen Research Group
« on: December 08, 2008, 10:38:53 PM »
Quote from: "Ursus"
Something should be said about their marketing style. Actually, something should probably be said about all the different programs' marketing styles, which differ just enough to end up creating slightly different pools of marks.

E.g., WWASPS vs. Aspen vs. religiously-based vs. psycho-therapeutic (e.g., John McKay's Attachment Therapy programs in NM, TX; although he has now opened up another more typical "Academy" in Montana, I believe)...


I've written something up on Aspen's marketing styles awhile back...  http://www.associatedcontent.com/articl ... html?cat=4
In fact I have about 3 or 4 articles on this subject published online at this link....  http://www.associatedcontent.com/user/6 ... _moya.html

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:timeout: These kind of posts can put an end to an effort quicker than anything.  This happens everytime somebody tries to organize anything, and this is precisely why nobody has been able to get together on a large scale effort.  ---  :wall:

Possible Solution--

I have a copy of the fornits wiki at ficanetwork.net (I call it the ficawiki), fornits has a fornits wiki and the secret prisons for teens site has a copy of it.  We have it in all three places to thwart hacker efforts to take it down.  The ficawiki is up and running thanks to work from Carsteen Overgaard.  I have no problem letting people add information to that site or the ficanetwork site if you want to use either of those places to be an information clearinghouse on programs.... I'd have to assign permissions to allow people to add to ficanetwork, just let me know who.... and I think everyone is already able to access the ficawiki.....

Right now, anyone can blog there. There are numerous possibilities.  You can create a "book" of documents, forums, and there is an unlimited amount of possibilities because it is like the wiki software in that it is an open source software program.    In this case, you don't have to agree with anyone about anything, you can just add what you think is pertinent.

Any thoughts????

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I have some images and .pdf's of some newspaper stories..where should I put these?

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