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Topics - Kiwi

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1
The Troubled Teen Industry / How to Save a Troubled Kid?
« on: November 15, 2004, 06:15:00 AM »
How to Save a Troubled Kid?

http://http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101041122-782109,00.html

Just what a kid with bipolar disorder needs - a WWASP program! :roll:

2
The Troubled Teen Industry / There is a town named after J Ralph Atkin
« on: October 29, 2004, 04:47:00 PM »
There is a town named after J Ralph Atkin .. well his family actually.

http://http://www.sonsofutahpioneers.info/hs/A24-atkinville.html

Seems he is not content just to have his own airline.  I suppose he feels he needs to keep up with his friend Bob Lichfield who has an English city named after him :wink:

BTW, Grace Atkin Woodbury and Angus Mumm Woodbury wouldn't be related to Lon Woodbury would they?

3
The Troubled Teen Industry / Ken Kay on BBC World Service
« on: October 01, 2004, 04:34:00 PM »
... with a program parent and three kids:

http://http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmes/outlook_peo.shtml#thu

At least two of the kids were trying to put a positive spin on TB, "it saved my life", but Kay dismissed them as liars because they told the truth about 'restraint'.  The one who had her jaw broken and was on her third operation to repair it would have had a hard time putting a positive spin on her experience.

4
http://http://www.sltrib.com/utah/ci_2421205

Legislator seeks oversight of schools with Utah ties
Overseas facilities: The California congressman cites allegations of abuse in asking for more scrutiny
By Robert Gehrke
The Salt Lake Tribune
 
WASHINGTON - A California congressman urged Secretary of State Colin Powell on Thursday to apply additional scrutiny of several overseas schools for troubled teens run by a southern Utah company.
    ?I am very concerned about the adequacy of existing policies of the U.S. State Department for assessing serious allegations of improper conduct towards American children in overseas facilities,? wrote Rep. George Miller, the senior Democrat on the House Education Committee.
    Miller said there have been hundreds of alleged incidents of abuse, overcrowding, malnutrition and inadequate medical care at the schools operated by the World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools (WWASPS).
    Miller's letter comes after Mexican authorities ordered the closure of one of the schools, Casa By the Sea, in Ensenada, Mexico, on Sept. 11 after finding unacceptable conditions during a site visit.
    In the past, governments in Samoa, Costa Rica, and the Czech Republic took similar actions after complaints of inhumane   treatment and inadequate care.
    The WWASPS network has eight more schools remaining in the United States and abroad, where parents can pay roughly $3,000 a month to have their rebellious teenagers taught in a rigorously structured environment.
    WWASPS is based in St. George and headed by Robert Lichfield whose business associates and family members have contributed more than $1 million to political candidates since 2001.
    In addition to asking for an explanation of the State Department's policy regarding inspection of the facilities and inspection records, Miller asked to what extent the department coordinates with foreign governments and for copies of correspondence with WWASPS officials.
   State Department spokesman Steve Pike said recently there is little the government can do since the schools are private businesses operating outside the country.
    Miller has written two earlier letters to Attorney General John Ashcroft requesting a Justice Department investigation into WWASPS and its founders. The Justice Department   said it lacked the authority to investigate facilities abroad, but referred Miller's concerns to the U.S. Attorney in Utah, which passed the matter to the local FBI office.
    Efforts by state officials to regulate the WWASPS programs in Utah were scuttled during the last legislative session, as senior House members helped smother the bill in the House Rules Committee.
   Opponents of the bill received large contributions from Lichfield following the session, including House Speaker Marty Stephens, who was given   $30,000 for his gubernatorial race.

5
http://http://www.metropulse.com/dir_zine/dir_2004/1429/t_notw.html

FEUDS

"... And in St. Petersburg, Fla., in March, the U.S. ambassador to Italy, Melvin Sembler, who for 17 years ran an aggressive drug treatment program called Straight, filed a lawsuit against disgruntled Straight ex-client Richard Bradbury, who allegedly has harassed Sembler since 1987, including rummaging through his garbage (once finding Sembler?s penile pump and advertising it on eBay)."

Well, it made the news I guess.  Perhaps a few people could tell them that many regard the matter as a little more than a noteworthy absurdity:

HOW TO CONTACT US
 
Mailing Address
Metro Pulse
505 Market St., Level 300
Knoxville, TN 37902

Phone
(865) 522-5399

Fax
(865) 522-2955

General E-Mail

Letters to the editor:
[email protected]

6
Whoops!  Wrong forum
[ This Message was edited by: Kiwi on 2004-07-15 02:12 ]

7
The Troubled Teen Industry / Pillars of Hope and Swan Lake Academy
« on: June 24, 2004, 06:38:00 AM »
http://http://www2.boisestate.edu/nasc/iaaec.htm

Does anyone know anything about Pillars of Hope or Swan Lake Academy?  I had never heard of either of them.  Two new WWASP schools in the planning?

8
The Troubled Teen Industry / Now there's a surprise!
« on: May 04, 2004, 06:07:00 AM »
I see Bob Lichfield continues to pay bri... I mean make political donations.

http://http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,595060699,00.html

http://http://www.sltrib.com/2004/May/05042004/utah/utah.asp

"House Speaker Marty Stephens' largest single contribution of $30,000 was from Robert Lichfield, one of the founders of programs for troubled teens. Some of the Lichfield family's operations have been plagued with accusations of mistreatment and abuse."

9
http://http://news10now.com/content/all_news/?ArID=14770&SecID=83

By: Kristin Smith, News 10 Now Web Staff

Members of an escort service that transfers troubled teens to a North Country school for juveniles are accused of assaulting a child it was transporting.

Police say the 17-year-old boy's parents, from Red Hook, were disappointed when their son's grades slipped over recent months.

They say he had no prior record, but his parents decided to send him to the Academy at Ivy Ridge in Ogdensburg. They take in troubled teens.

The boy?s parents decided to get an escort service to drive him there.

?They had made arrangements with the people from Teen Escort to get him in the middle of the night when he was groggy, when he wouldn't really understand what was going on and probably wouldn't put up much resistance,? said James Hunt, New York State Police Department.

Police say the parents paid about two thousand dollars to have the Utah-based company take their child to the school, but Hunt says Teen Escort seems to be operating in gray areas of the law.
 
According to police, on March 22nd, 38-year-old Timothy Hurd and 24-year-old Leonard Faulstick handcuffed the teen, forced him into a vehicle, and started to drive.

Police say the three were on the thruway in the town of Canajoharie when the boy apparently reached over the front seat of the vehicle and pulled on the steering wheel, causing the car to crash into a guardrail.

Troopers took an accident report and let them go.

Police say the men then re-handcuffed the teen behind his back and beat him.

?We're not certain at this point in time just who in New York is regulating this industry. Whether in the schools, whether it's the Department of Education, whether it's the Department of Social Services, the police, the Attorney General?s Office, we don't know who's regulating this activity,? he said.

Hunt says Hurd and Faulstick are charged with unlawful imprisonment in the second degree and assault in the third degree.

Both are scheduled to appear in the Town of Canajoharie Court on April 2nd.

The boy is now back at home with his parents.

Hunt says Teen Escort is under investigation for poor regulation. Ivy Ridge is also under investigation due to claims of child abuse at the school.

The FBI is investigating. [ This Message was edited by: Kiwi on 2004-03-29 12:34 ]

10
The Troubled Teen Industry / BUHS ATHLETES: More customers for WWASP
« on: March 22, 2004, 09:02:00 AM »
http://http://www.ivpressonline.com/articles/2004/03/20/news/news04.txt

Quote
Whether a student can sprint, blow a horn or make that game-winning goal for Brawley Union High School soon could depend on the results of a urine sample...

The urine sample will be tested for barbiturates, cocaine, methamphetamines and marijuana.

All well-known performance enhancing drugs!

11
http://http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/southflorida/sfl-tranquil14mar14,0,5883696.story?coll=sfla-news-sfla

A year had passed and he still had a drug-addicted teen daughter, a stack of bills from child psychotherapists, too many sleepless nights and a missing wedding band.

Bill Myers said he paid the bills and regained some peace of mind. But he could not unravel the enigma that was his 14-year-old daughter, an A student at Piper High School in Sunrise, who stayed out three nights in a row and popped drugs like candy, Myers said.    
 
Myers never found the wedding band. He said his daughter pawned it for drug money.

He searched Web sites on boot camps and tough love centers and eventually found Tranquility Bay, the Jamaica-based flagship of nine behavior modification schools affiliated with WWASPS, the World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools.

South Florida, which sends more teens to the school than any other region in the country, is the center of a national debate about Tranquility Bay. While one group of South Florida parents rallies against Tranquility Bay, saying the school abused their children, dozens of others say the school accomplished what they couldn't: It taught their children respect and instilled discipline.

Interest in such schools is growing because many of today's teens have more expendable income and less responsibility, said Andy Anderson of the National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs, a membership organization for schools that deal with the behavioral attitudes of school-age children.

For an annual tuition of $30,000 to $50,000, WWASPS promises to reshape troubled teens in a structured environment that uses a system of rewards and punishments.

Myers said his daughter might be dead if he hadn't sent her to Tranquility Bay, in rural St. Elizabeth, Jamaica.

After two years there, she is a respectful, thoughtful girl who recently apologized for pawning his ring, he said.

But a group of five South Florida parents who pulled their children out of Tranquility Bay over the past three years claim their kids weren't helped -- and that staff members physically abused them, said Susan Scheff, a Weston parent leading the charge against the WWASPS network.

In a report sent to the State Department, the U.S. Embassy in Jamaica, and U.S. Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the International Survivors Action Committee, a self-described watchdog of behavior modification schools, accused Tranquility Bay of human rights violations. The report includes former student accounts of physical abuse, insect-infested quarters and inadequate meals.

WWASPS President Ken Kay dismissed the accusations.

"If we were abusing kids or doing anything wrong, we would not make it mandatory to have parents visit," Kay said. "No police department has been able to substantiate any claims of abuse."

Police in Jamaica say they have had no such complaints filed and know of no problems at the school. The U.S. Embassy in Jamaica and the U.S. Attorney General's office said they had no jurisdiction to investigate a private school.

For now, parents are relying on a Los Angeles law firm to address their concerns. Huron Maki & Johnson confirmed it has been investigating allegations against WWASPS for more than a year. "We're doing this for many previous students at the organization," said attorney Henry Bushkin. "There are South Florida kids involved."

Tranquility Bay has received so much negative attention recently that school officials refused to allow media, including the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, to visit.

How the program works

The WWASPS schools serve about 2,200 students from ages 11 to 18 in the United States, Mexico and Jamaica. Most students are white and come from middle- to upper-middle-class families, said WWASPS spokesman James Wall.

"You have a huge spread of kids who are certainly headed for a life of crime, and just kids who are defiant, serial liars whose parents just feel they need a kick on the backside to get them on track," Wall said.

Parents give Tranquility Bay control of their children and release the school from many responsibilities, including illness and injuries, as well as "any inappropriate interaction between staff and students."

"The whole thing is set up so that kids can move up a ladder and gain freedoms as they progress," Wall said.

The program consists of six levels. Students start at Level 1. They must earn points before they're allowed to look at each other or talk. When they earn enough points to move to Level 2, they can speak without permission. At Level 3, they can phone home. At Levels 4 through 6, they enjoy more privileges, such as visits from their parents.

But one infraction and a student can lose all privileges, after months of good behavior.

Kay said staffers physically restrain students who become combative and out of control. But he said the staff is now being trained to calm students using less physical contact.

Kay called the controversy "absolutely absurd," especially because the complaining teens have centered their lives around deceit and disrespect, he said.

"The abuse that's going on with youth today is not in this program," Kay said. "It's in negative rap music, poor role models, sometimes the public schools, and from all those drugs out there. That's the abuse."

Having regrets

Dominick Caravella had lost control of his daughter, Cassandra, 14. She was failing school and had been arrested for having marijuana.

He eventually sent her to Tranquility Bay.

"I figured if I spent a lot of money, it had to be a good place," said Caravella, a Coral Springs auto appraiser.

After seven months, Caravella ordered Tranquility Bay to send his daughter home. In phone calls, Cassandra had sounded sad and told him she was being physically abused, he said. She came home July 4, just shy of her 16th birthday. "I didn't recognize her. She was real puffy," said Caravella. "She said it was from lying on her face. She said they were treating her like an animal, she was starving, getting restrained, beat up."

In an interview after her return, Cassandra described a typical day at Tranquility Bay. She said she had to get up at 6 a.m., clean the room she shared with several girls, shower, wash clothes by hand, then eat a breakfast of porridge and crackers. The only book allowed was the Bible. Two hours later she went to gym class, then to shower in dirty stalls. After that, she had lunch, then more classes. She ended her day with group sessions and dinner, usually beans and stale bread. Cassandra said six staffers forced her to lie face down on the floor for a day as punishment for talking out of turn in study hall and looking at boys. "They asked me if I had enough, and I had to say, `Yes ma'am,'" Cassandra said.

Sometimes the workers would twist her arms behind her back, dig their knees into her back, and push her ankles into the floor, she said.

"They called it giving her a `good stretch,'" Caravella said.

"I cried every night," Cassandra said, "I didn't want them to hear me cry because they held that against me."

Myers dismissed such complaints as tales from conniving students who want their cushy lives back. He asked that the Sun-Sentinel not name his daughter because she is a minor.

"They give you the horror stories, but there's a thousand ways they (kids) know how to push your buttons," he said. "We spoil our kids rotten."

Karla Shores can be reached at [email protected] or 954-356-4552.

12
The Troubled Teen Industry / WWASP Sues Reporter
« on: February 04, 2004, 10:06:00 AM »
http://http://www.sltrib.com/2004/Feb/02042004/utah/135541.asp

Group of schools sues reporter, alleging slander
 
By Matt Canham
The Salt Lake Tribune

An embattled collection of schools for troubled youths struck back Tuesday against a reporter it claims defamed its reputation by falsely telling parents that school officials abused their children.

St. George-based World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools (WWASPS) seeks unspecified damages in the federal civil suit filed against United Press International reporter Thomas Houlahan.

The suit, filed in the U.S. District Court in Salt Lake City, alleges Houlahan called Maryland-native Laura Boatright in July 2003 telling her he had investigated WWASPS for the past eight months and knew about supposed abuse involving her son at The Academy at Ivy Ridge, in Ogdensburg, N.Y.

Ivy Ridge is one of seven behavior modification schools associated with WWASPS in the United States. The association also has two schools operating outside of the country.

Boatright declined to comment Tuesday.

WWASPS alleges Houlahan made similar calls to other parents of students and did so knowing the claims were false.

"I don't know what Mr. Houlahan's agenda is, but it seems to me that he is blatantly trying to interfere in our business," WWASPS President Ken Kay said Tuesday.

Houlahan and UPI declined to comment.

In May, Costa Rica officials closed the association's Dundee Ranch Academy, saying the school violated the children's civil rights.

Kay claims his organization has been maligned by reporters too willing to believe the stories of troubled teens with chronic lying problems.

13
The Troubled Teen Industry / Majestic Ranch Prosecution
« on: January 19, 2004, 12:28:00 PM »
http://http://attorneygeneral.utah.gov/PrRel/prjune142002.htm

Does anyone know what became of this case?  The director was charged and then it went very quiet.  Last I heard, some of the accusers had been transferred to Tranquility Bay.  Maybe the prosecutor is finding it a little tricky to pursue this without his star witnesses.

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