Fornits

Treatment Abuse, Behavior Modification, Thought Reform => News Items => Topic started by: wdtony on August 05, 2010, 02:04:12 AM

Title: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 05, 2010, 02:04:12 AM
http://thechronicleherald.ca/NovaScotia/1195194.html (http://thechronicleherald.ca/NovaScotia/1195194.html)

Police probe abuse complaint

N.S. boy, 15, suffered black eye, cuts and scratches at facility for troubled youth in Ontario, family alleges

By The Canadian Press
Wed, Aug 4, 2010- 4:53 AM[/b]


Police in Ontario are looking into allegations that a young boy was abused by staff at a home for troubled youth.

Sgt. Kristine Rae, a spokeswoman for the Ontario Provincial Police, said Tuesday that they are investigating the case of a 15-year-old boy from Nova Scotia who is living at the Bayfield treatment facility in Consecon, Ont.

Rae couldn’t provide any details of the case, saying only that they are looking into a complaint at the privately run operation.

The boy’s grandmother, who cannot be named to protect the youth’s identity, said he told her two staff members threw him to the floor, punched him in the ribs and kneeled on his throat late last month.

His grandmother said he suffered a black eye, cuts on his head and scratches all over his body.

She said RCMP, on behalf of the OPP, took a videotaped statement from her and her husband last week, asking what their grandson had told them about the alleged incident.

She said they listened to audio recordings the woman had of her conversations with the teenager.

"They asked if we feel he was telling the truth," she said. "I said, ‘Yes.’ "

Still, she’s not optimistic it will produce results.

"We don’t think there’s anythings going to come of it," the boy’s grandmother said.

The boy was sent more than a year ago to the operation that offers long-term, intensive treatment for boys with conduct disorders because Nova Scotia does not have a similar facility. The decision was endorsed by the Nova Scotia Supreme Court.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 05, 2010, 02:15:58 AM
This was the first article:

http://thechronicleherald.ca/Front/1192815.html (http://thechronicleherald.ca/Front/1192815.html)


N.S. teen abused at facility, say advocates

By MICHAEL MacDONALD The Canadian Press
Tue, Jul 20 - 4:52, 2010 AM

 

An advocacy group is calling for an investigation into allegations that a Nova Scotia youth struggling with a conduct disorder was physically abused on the weekend by staff at a treatment facility in eastern Ontario.

Roch Longueepee, founder of Restoring Dignity, a non-profit group that seeks justice for victims of institutional child abuse, said Monday that the 15-year-old should be removed from the Bayfield facility in Consecon until a specialized treatment program can be set up for him in Nova Scotia.

Longueepee said the youth, who can’t be named, told his aunt that two male staff members refused his request to go to the washroom on Sunday, then threw him to the floor, punched him in the ribs and kneed him in the throat.
The aunt issued a statement saying he was left with a black eye, cuts to his head and scratches on his body.
"We have to react and respond to this boy’s cry for help," Longueepee told a news conference. "We are concerned that the situation is out of control . . . I am concerned that this boy is in danger."

The accusations have not been proven. Sharlene Weitzman, chief operating officer for the privately run facility, declined comment citing privacy concerns.

However, Longueepee released a copy of a Justice Department document that shows the province received a call from Bayfield on Sunday at 4:25 a.m., stating that the youth had been allegedly inciting others to attack staff before punching and kicking at some of them.

The document, produced by the Provincial Emergency Duty Program, says the boy was "placed in a position of control." No other details were provided.

Court documents show the boy has been receiving government help since he was four years old, having been in the care of foster homes, group homes and other programs for years.

 
 
He has been in the care of Nova Scotia’s Community Services Department since November 2008, when it was deemed he required intensive, long-term care because he was a risk to himself and the community.

Longueepee said the boy is a sexual abuse victim who was abandoned by his parents before he was five.
As well, he said the boy has "cognitive issues," but none of the diagnoses he has received are conclusive.
Last summer, the Nova Scotia Supreme Court approved the department’s plan to send him to the Bayfield facility near Trenton, Ont., because the province had exhausted its options.

"It was evident that none of those services had achieved the goal of preventing the situation then faced by the minister and the adolescent’s grandparents," Nova Scotia Supreme Court Justice Beryl MacDonald wrote in a decision released in April.
MacDonald said the adolescent was "totally out of control," would not obey instruction and "presented as a risk to himself and to his community."

The judge also noted that the province had to send the boy outside the province because it does not have a secure, residential facility that can provide long-term, intensive treatment.

At first, the court agreed to send the youth to a facility in Utah, but that fell through and Bayfield was recommended.
Vicki Wood, the department’s director of child welfare, also declined to comment on the allegations.
"I have no knowledge that a child was punched in the ribs or kneed in the throat," she said.

Wood said the department would investigate any allegations of abuse, noting that under an interprovincial protocol, the Ontario facility is expected to follow Nova Scotia rules pertaining to the use of physical restraint of youths who put themselves or others in danger.

"They would never restrain a child for punitive reasons," she said. "It’s to intervene in a situation of danger."
Wood confirmed that the department and the boy’s family can’t agree on the treatment he should receive.

"There’s a forum for the family to bring forward their concerns — that would be the court, not a press conference," Wood said. "The judge is going to make a decision based on information presented to the court, not a third-party organization such as Mr. Longueepee’s, which has no real knowledge of the case."

Longueepee later took exception to Wood's comments, saying it's ``false, absolutely false'' that he has no knowledge of the case.

``I have the entire collection of files from the courts,'' he said, adding he's also interviewed the boy.
The boy's grandparents, who have been caring for him for most of his life, approached the advocacy group in March after they learned of the boy's complaints at Bayfield.

Longueepee said his organization has received complaints of abuse from former residents of Bayfield and their families.
He said the problem is that provinces like Ontario and Nova Scotia continue to cling to the belief that the best place for troubled teens is in an institution.

``These institutions can't be the parents for these children,'' he said.
His group is proposing a specialized foster care program that would cost the province about $175,000 to set up in the first year.

The plan has been submitted to the provincial government, but it has yet to respond, he said.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 05, 2010, 04:59:31 AM
Another previous article:

http://www.metronews.ca/halifax/comment ... n-this-one (http://www.metronews.ca/halifax/comment/article/586658--community-services-dropped-the-ball-on-this-one)


Community services dropped the ball on this one

Urban Compass by Stephen Kimber

FOR METRO HALIFAX

Published: July 26, 2010 9:00 a.m.
Last modified: July 25, 2010 6:29 p.m.

                 
Forget duelling interviews, competing psychologists, contradictory studies, even the difference between physically assaulted and “placed in a position of control.”

Ask yourself one question: Is the 15-year-old Cole Harbour boy at the centre of the controversy over his care better off now than when community services shipped him off to Ontario 13 months ago?


A quick recap: The boy, who suffers from a psychiatrist’s brew of  disorders, had been raised by his grandparents since he was a toddler. By November 2008, his acting out — running away, stealing cars, doing drugs, selling his body — was so out of control his grandparents agreed to put him in the care of community services.


Instead of treating him here, the province decided he needed secure, long-term facilities it couldn’t provide. Last June, it shipped him off to Ontario’s Bayfield centre.


Is he better off?


According to his grandmother, he’s on heavy doses of drugs, some self-administered (she says Bayfield wants to add lithium to his medical cocktail), he rarely attends classes, and he has been what the reports call “restrained” on at least 10 occasions. Once, he ended up at the hospital. More recently, he claims he was beaten for asking to go to the washroom.


To complicate matters, Bayfield has done its best to cut the boy off from his grandparents, refusing some face-to-face visits, limiting phone calls to two, monitored 15-minute conversations a week and even, at one point, imposing a total contact blackout because the grandmother was “negative” on the phone. How? In one report I saw, the monitor complained she “asked about his medication again, and was more assertive that she did not believe he should just be taking medication whenever he wanted.”


Last week, Vicki Wood, Nova Scotia’s  director of child welfare, claimed “we make every effort to maintain the ties” between child and family. Really?


Wood also said: “There’s a forum for the family to bring forward their concerns. That would be the court, not a press conference.”


The problem is Nova Scotia’s family court seems like an extension of community services. Community services doesn’t appear willing to consider alternatives to out-of-province institutional treatment.


The boy is not better off.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: Ursus on August 05, 2010, 10:13:39 AM
First, at the risk of sounding too particular, can I ask whether all of your articles are from this year? No year was provided with the date for the first two. This can end up being more important as time goes on...

Second, is this the same kid from Nova Scotia who almost got sent to Cinnamon Hills last year? He would be about the same age. I recall that he was also raised by his grandparents, and ended up getting sent to Bayfield instead. More on that case, as well as some commentary on Bayfield, here:

Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 05, 2010, 04:39:50 PM
Quote from: "Ursus"
First, at the risk of sounding too particular, can I ask whether all of your articles are from this year? No year was provided with the date for the first two. This can end up being more important as time goes on...

Second, is this the same kid from Nova Scotia who almost got sent to Cinnamon Hills last year? He would be about the same age. I recall that he was also raised by his grandparents, and ended up getting sent to Bayfield instead. More on that case, as well as some commentary on Bayfield, here:

  • Canadian Teen saved from Utah facilities · viewtopic.php?f=22&t=28116 (http://www.fornits.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=28116)

Thank you Ursus, good catch on the dates. Yes, they are all from this year, I have edited them. I was in a hurry to put them up here because they disappear from the net so quickly sometimes. One is already hidden from public view.

I would guess that you are correct about this being the same boy that was almost sent to Cinnamon Hills. I have no proof of this though. From what I have heard it was a choice between Provo Canyon and Cinnamon Hills, so I would believe this is the same boy. I appreciate the link.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: Ursus on August 06, 2010, 05:12:20 PM
Here are some other articles from The Chronicle Herald (http://http://thechronicleherald.ca) which have already slipped into the pay-per-view category, just in case someone has an account with them:


Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 06, 2010, 05:20:53 PM
http://www.thetelegram.com/section/2010 ... -Ontario/1 (http://www.thetelegram.com/section/2010-07-22/article-1602672/Grandmother-says-officials-have-barred-her-from-seeing-troubled-teen-in-Ontario/1)


Grandmother says officials have barred her from seeing troubled teen in Ontario


Published on July 22nd, 2010

 HALIFAX - The grandmother of a Nova Scotia youth who claims he was physically abused by staff at an Ontario treatment facility says officials have barred her from seeing him.

The woman, who can't be named to protect the youth's identity, says the troubled 15-year-old told her that staff at the Bayfield facility in Consecon forced him to the floor, punched him in the ribs and kneeled on his throat.

She says the scuffle Sunday left him with a black eye and cuts on his head.

The grandmother says she asked if she could visit the youth on Friday or Monday, but was told that wasn't possible because an investigation is underway.

Officials with the provincial Community Services Department and the Bayfield facility declined today to comment on the case.

But the director of child welfare for the department has previously said the boy told his social worker that he fabricated the allegations.

The decision to send the boy out of the province was endorsed by Nova Scotia Supreme Court more than a year ago when the province confirmed it had exhausted its treatment and housing options.

The boy suffers from cognitive disorders and has been in the care of the Community Services Department since November 2008, when it was determined he was a threat to himself and the community.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 06, 2010, 05:26:57 PM
http://www.canadaeast.com/rss/article/1144137 (http://www.canadaeast.com/rss/article/1144137)

Grandmother defends N.S. teen alleging abuse at Ontario treatment facility

Published Wednesday July 21st, 2010

Michael MacDonald, The Canadian Press


HALIFAX - The grandmother of a Nova Scotia youth struggling with behavioural disorders says a provincial official was wrong to suggest Wednesday that the troubled boy has recanted allegations he was abused by staff at a treatment facility in Ontario.

The woman, who can't be named to protect the youth's identity, said the 15-year-old is sticking to his story that two staff members at the Bayfield facility in Consecon threw him to the floor, punched him in the ribs and kneeled on his throat — stopping his breathing for a moment.

She said she spoke with him by phone Tuesday and he repeated he has a black eye, cuts on his head and scratches all over his body.

"He said ... 'they beat me,' " the woman said in an interview, noting that the altercation began at 2 a.m. Sunday when the boy asked to go to the washroom.

"And the next thing you know, bam! Down on the floor and they punched him in the ribs and the kneed him. They slammed him down on the floor. ... He said, 'Mum, it really hurt.' "

She said the boy fought back only to protect himself.

Vicki Wood, director of child welfare with Nova Scotia's Community Services Department, said the boy told his social worker he was wrong to fabricate the allegations he made Sunday.

"He told her that he had not been injured, he did not have a black eye and he's not sure why he said that," she said in an interview.

"When you're working with children who have emotional and behavioural disorders, it's not unusual for them to have episodes where they're ... having difficulty. In those difficulties they may leave a program, they may say things that may encourage someone to come and get them."

Wood confirmed that the department reviews every report of abuse.

The grandmother's voice trembled with emotion when she spoke about the Nova Scotia government's attempts to help the family.

"They have destroyed our family here," she said. "You know what it feels like in this house? Death. We know he's alive, but it feels like death."

She said the teen has complained to her about rough treatment at Bayfield on at least 10 other occasions. As a result, he should be removed until a specialized program can be set up in Nova Scotia, she added.

The accusations have not been proven and officials at Bayfield have declined comment. But documents from Nova Scotia's Justice Department confirm their was a struggle on Sunday and the boy was restrained.

The teen has been in the care of Nova Scotia's Community Services Department since November 2008, when it was determined he was a threat to himself and the community. He suffers from various cognitive challenges, but the grandmother and the family's lawyer insist there has never been a conclusive diagnosis.

"I'm not saying that he doesn't have a disability," the grandmother said. "When the child was in school, he couldn't sit down."

But she dismissed published reports that suggest the boy suffers from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and fetal alcohol syndrome, a disorder that leaves individuals with little ability to control their impulses.

"Nobody knows what's wrong with this child," she said.

Wood said she understands that it's difficult for families whose children are being cared for in another province.

"We make every effort to maintain the ties," she said, noting that the province plans to open a facility similar to Bayfield as early as next year.

But that's not good enough for the boy's grandmother.

"If you don't have family contact, it's not going to work," she said, noting that the family can't afford to travel to Ontario very often. "At least if he was in Nova Scotia, we could visit more."

The boy has been involved in two car thefts and charged with various petty crimes, but his record does not include any violent offences, lawyer Patrick Eagan said in an interview.

The decision to send the boy out of the province was endorsed by Nova Scotia Supreme Court more than a year ago when the province confirmed it had exhausted its options.

The province doesn't have a facility similar to Bayfield, a privately run operation that offers long-term, intensive treatment for boys with conduct disorders, psychiatric disorders and attention deficit disorder.

His story attracted national attention last year when the court decided to send him to a facility in Utah, which is about 3,600 kilometres from the Maritime province. The Utah centre later said the boy could not be admitted.

A Supreme Court ruling published in April said the boy's grandparents lack understanding and acceptance of the adolescent's cognitive deficiencies. As well, the ruling said the grandmother has given the teen reasons to feel justified in disrespecting staff at Bayfield.

On Wednesday, the woman scoffed at those findings.

"They twist things around," she said.

The woman and the boy's grandfather have cared for him since he was a toddler. His mother lost custody of him in British Columbia — though the details remain sketchy — and his father has never been around.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 06, 2010, 05:32:03 PM
http://news.sympatico.cbc.ca/local/ns/n ... d/9be07f04 (http://news.sympatico.cbc.ca/local/ns/ns_boys_claim_of_abuse_at_care_facility_probed/9be07f04)

N.S. boy's claim of abuse at care facility probed

04/08/2010 8:42:44 AM

CBC News


A Nova Scotia woman says she welcomes a police investigation into allegations that her grandson is being abused at an Ontario facility for troubled youth.


The grandmother told CBC News on Wednesday she believes the 15-year-old boy is being mistreated at the Bayfield treatment centre in Consecon, just south of Trenton in eastern Ontario.

Ontario Provincial Police confirm they are investigating.

"I hope they get to this, that this is really happening there with this child, because something is going to happen if they don't get that child out of there," said the grandmother, who cannot be named to protect the identity of the boy.

"If he was here and I was abusing him and putting marks on him I would be locked out. He would be removed from my home."

She said her grandson was cut, bruised and jabbed in the ribs during a struggle with staff who were trying to restrain him. She said he had no choice but to defend himself.

"Three on to you, beating you? I mean, you're going to try to struggle or run. And he stood there and fought back. But he got the worst of it," she said.

She said it happened when he tried to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night.

The boy is in the permanent care of the Nova Scotia Department of Community Services. He suffers from mental disorders and has been in conflict with the law. Last year, he was sent to the Bayfield facility because Nova Scotia doesn't have the kind of treatment program he needs.

Sgt. Kristine Rae, a police spokeswoman, said Tuesday that investigators are looking into a complaint at Bayfield, but she couldn't give details.

The grandmother said she gave a videotaped interview to Cole Harbour RCMP and provided audiotapes of her grandson discussing the abuse allegations with her.

She said she told RCMP that she believes her grandson's account.

The Department of Community Services is aware of the police investigation but wouldn't say whether its own investigation has concluded.

"We take all allegations of abuse seriously, and we encourage the authorities to investigate them," said a department spokesperson.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 20, 2010, 07:15:57 PM
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/1197843.html (http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/1197843.html)

Grandparents cut off from troubled teen

Family contact’s become an obstacle, Ontario treatment facility claims

By EVA HOARE Staff Reporter
Fri, Aug 20 (2010) - 4:53 AM


The grandparents of a troubled Nova Scotia teenager under treatment at a facility in Ontario say they’re outraged that the centre has cut them off completely from him.

"Know what it feels like? It feels like (a) death," the 15-year-old’s grandmother said in an interview Thursday evening from her home in Cole Harbour. "They want to keep him from family."

The grandparents learned of the decision to halt all communication between them and their grandson in a letter sent to their home Thursday.

"Family contact has become an obstacle to providing (the teen) with the treatment he requires in a highly structured residential facility," said the letter from the Nova Scotia Community Services Department.

The letter, signed by two caseworkers from the Dartmouth office of Community Services, says the decision was based on the recommendation of Bayfield Homes in Consecon, Ont., where the boy now lives.

Neither the boy nor his grandparents can be named in order to protect his identity because of his age.

The grandparents have raised the boy for most of his life, but more than a year ago Community Services placed him in care.

The teen has a history of running away from home and from care facilities and for engaging in risky behaviour such as sex with adult men and women, court has previously heard. He also once went joyriding in a stolen car that struck a pole.

He has been diagnosed with cognitive limitations, fetal alcohol syndrome, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and oppositional defiant behaviour.

Nova Scotia does not have a treatment facility that is equipped to deal with the boy’s condition. The boy’s grandmother says the decision to stop her and her husband from phoning the teen is payback because they launched a criminal complaint with police alleging the boy has been abused at the Ontario centre.

"We feel it’s a vendetta because we went to the media because the child got restrained and hurt there," she said. "They wanted us to keep it a secret."

Early this month, Ontario police confirmed they were investigating allegations that staff at the Bayfield home had abused the boy, The Canadian Press reported. She said Thursday she is worried about how the lack of contact with family will affect her grandson.

"I believe he knows," she said of the no-contact order. "We were expecting a call this evening but we didn’t get that."

In their letter, the caseworkers say they will make an application to change the court order in place regarding access to the teen.

"You try to work with them," the boy’s grandfather said. "They don’t want to work with you. I don’t know . . . I really don’t know."

"They’re going to take us back to court," the grandmother said. "We’re not giving up."
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: ajax13 on August 22, 2010, 05:34:42 PM
Where have we seen this before:
"Sanders, L. Attachment of Adolescent Males in a Residential Treatment Setting, UMI Publication, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 2003.  
Sanders, L. & Jamieson, J. Predictors of Academic Achievement for At Risk Adolescent Males in a Residential Treatment Centre, 2004.
Sanders, L., Committee Chair,  Ontario Association for Treating Youth, Partners in Care- 1,2and 3:
Sanders, L. & Fulton, R. Educational Achievement and Attachment, The Bayfield School Outcome Study, 2006."
To obtain copies of the research projects contact Larry S. Sanders, Ph.D., Chairman/CEO, Bayfield http://www.bayfield.net/Research.html (http://www.bayfield.net/Research.html)

Another asshole running an experimental project with captive adolescents.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 25, 2010, 12:30:06 PM
Video about residential treatment, Dr. Charles Emmrys:

http://www.vimeo.com/14364283 (http://www.vimeo.com/14364283)
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 25, 2010, 12:33:46 PM
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/9017638.html (http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/9017638.html)

Troubled teen to be released from Ontario facility

Family not told where grandson will go

By The Canadian Press
Tue, Aug 24 (2010) - 2:26 PM


The family of a troubled Nova Scotia teen being treated for behavioural disorders at a facility in Ontario says he is being discharged Wednesday and they aren't being told where he's going.

The family, who can't be named to protect the youth's identity, says their contact with him has been suspended.

Nova Scotia's Department of Community Services sent a letter to his grandmother last week notifying her that access would be denied because the family had become an obstacle to providing the boy with the treatment he needs.

Roch Longueepee, who leads an advocacy group working with the family to bring the teen home, says they plan to challenge the access ban.

The 15-year-old has alleged he was abused at an Ontario treatment facility, a claim that is under police investigation.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 25, 2010, 12:38:36 PM
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/nat ... le1683654/ (http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/atlantic/ns-family-says-its-not-being-told-where-troubled-teen-will-be-held/article1683654/)


N.S. family says it's not being told where troubled teen will be held

Boy claims he was abused at Ontario facility; family plans to challenge access ban

The Canadian Press
Published on Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2010 2:47PM EDT

 

The family of a troubled Nova Scotia teen being treated for behavioural disorders at a facility in Ontario says he is being discharged Wednesday and they aren't being told where he's going.

The family, who can't be named to protect the youth's identity, produced a letter from Nova Scotia's Department of Community Services on Tuesday that said their contact with the boy had been suspended on the recommendation of the facility where he is housed.

The department sent the letter to his grandmother last week arguing that family contact had become an obstacle to the youth's treatment.

Roch Longueepee, who leads an advocacy group working with the family to bring the teen home, said they plan to challenge the access ban.

“I think what's happening here is that the government has its tail between its legs and this is just a desperate ploy to get rid of the key players,” he said.

He said the family will go to court Friday to argue that they have a right to know where the boy will be transferred.

The 15-year-old has alleged he was abused at an Ontario facility, a claim that is under police investigation.

He has been in the care of the government of Nova Scotia since November 2008, when it was determined he was a threat to himself and the community.

He suffers from various cognitive challenges, but his grandmother and the family's lawyer say there has never been a conclusive diagnosis.

Nova Scotia does not have a facility capable of addressing the boy's needs and the province's Supreme Court agreed last year that he could be sent away because all local treatment options had been exhausted.

Mr. Longueepee said that they have assembled a team of health care professionals willing to help the boy if he were brought home and placed in some sort of foster care.

He said the Nova Scotia government remains unwilling to compromise even though, after more than a year in Ontario, the boy's program does not appear to have worked.

“It's their way or the highway and the family resists what is going on because they are concerned for the welfare and safety of the boy and I think that's a legitimate concern.”

The boy has been in the care of his grandparents since he was a toddler.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 25, 2010, 12:43:48 PM
http://www.metronews.ca/halifax/comment ... -s-dignity (http://www.metronews.ca/halifax/comment/article/609367--restoring-a-nova-scotia-boy-s-dignity)


Restoring a Nova Scotia boy's dignity


Urban Compass by Stephen Kimber
METRO HALIFAX
Published: August 23, 2010 9:00 a.m.


Nova Scotia’s Community Services Department has upped the ante: Last week it severed family access to a troubled Cole Harbour teenager it had shipped off to an Ontario residential care facility last year.

It will now apply to family court “to vary the current order with respect to access,” thus legalizing the elimination of the boys’ grandparents from any future role in his care.


Why?


According to an Aug. 19 letter to the grandparents from the department, the Ontario facility — Bayfield Homes — believes “family contact has become an obstacle to providing (the boy) with the treatment he requires in a highly structured residential facility.”


Really?


Could it be that family contact is an obstacle to the people who run that institution, and who profess to know best what is in the child’s now and future best interests?


Let’s recap.


The grandparents, who had raised the boy since he was a toddler and acknowledged he needed help they couldn’t provide, objected — in public — to the province’s plan to send him out of province for treatment.


They went to court in a lengthy but ultimately unsuccessful bid to bring him home.


They enlisted the aid of a New Brunswick child psychologist and other experts who came up with an alternative plan of care that would have seen the boy returned to Nova Scotia and cared for in a community setting.


Two weeks ago, the government turned down their plan.


Last spring, Restoring Dignity, a group advocating for victims of institutional abuse, took up the family’s cause, bringing allegations of mistreatment at Bayfield to the attention of various authorities in Ontario, including the province’s child advocate.


On July 19, the group organized a press conference to outline allegations the boy had been beaten for asking to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night. Ontario Provincial Police are investigating.


No wonder Bayfield isn’t happy.


The boy’s grandmother, admittedly, can be difficult. She’s relentless, even obsessive, about what she considers the best interests of her grandson.


Is that so bad? In three years, when the boy turns 18 and Bayfield washes its hands of him, who will be left to look out for his best interests?
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 25, 2010, 12:51:01 PM
http://www.metronews.ca/ottawa/canada/a ... ned-to-n-s (http://www.metronews.ca/ottawa/canada/article/610823--group-says-troubled-teen-returned-to-n-s)


Group says troubled teen returned to N.S.

Published: August 24, 2010 8:42 p.m.
Last modified: August 24, 2010 8:47 p.m.[/b]  
               
HALIFAX - A troubled Nova Scotia teen who was being treated for behavioural disorders at a facility in Ontario has been transferred to a facility in his home province, says an advocacy group that has been working with his family.

Roch Longueepee, who leads the group, said they were notified late Tuesday that the 15-year-old had been moved to Nova Scotia.

There was no immediate confirmation from the province.

"We are delighted that the boy is here," Longueepee said in an interview.

"He's back in our territory now and we are going to push harder for a program that we proposed to the province ... because we feel it's going to give him the best life outcome at this stage."

The family, who can't be named to protect the youth's identity, held a news conference earlier in the day and produced a letter from Nova Scotia's Department of Community Services that said their contact with the boy had been suspended on the recommendation of the Ontario facility where he was housed.

The department sent the letter to his grandmother last week arguing that family contact had become an obstacle to the youth's treatment.

The boy has alleged he was abused at an Ontario facility, a claim that is under police investigation.

He has been in the care of the government of Nova Scotia since November 2008, when it was determined he was a threat to himself and the community.

He suffers from various cognitive challenges, but his grandmother and the family's lawyer say there has never been a conclusive diagnosis.

The Supreme Court of Nova Scotia agreed last year that he could be sent away because all local treatment options had been exhausted.

His mother lost custody of him in British Columbia and his father was never in the picture.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 25, 2010, 12:53:30 PM
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/1198583.html (http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/1198583.html)


Troubled teen back in Nova Scotia


Grandparents must still fight for contact
By The Canadian Press
Wed, Aug 25 (2010) - 4:53 AM


The grandparents of a troubled Cole Harbour teenager who was being treated for behavioural disorders at a facility in Ontario say he is now in Truro.

"God answers prayers," the 15-year-old boy’s grandmother said Tuesday night.

"We’re overwhelmed that he’s back here in Nova Scotia."

The grandmother and her husband, who cannot be named to protect the teen’s identity, received a letter by courier Tuesday night from the provincial Community Services Department saying their grandson is at a facility in Truro.

The grandparents said they were previously told the boy was to be discharged from the Ontario centre today and they wouldn’t be told where he was going.

They also received another letter from Community Services earlier Tuesday stating that their contact with the boy had been suspended on the recommendation of the Ontario facility. The department argued in the letter, sent last week, that family contact had become an obstacle to the boy’s treatment.

The grandparents are set to go to court Friday to fight that ban, his grandmother said.

The boy has alleged he was abused at the Ontario facility, a claim that is under police investigation.

He has been in the care of the Nova Scotia government since November 2008, when it was determined he was a threat to himself and the community. He suffers from various cognitive challenges, but his grandmother and the family’s lawyer say there has never been a conclusive diagnosis.

Nova Scotia does not have a facility capable of addressing the boy’s needs and the province’s Supreme Court agreed last year that he could be sent away because all local treatment options had been exhausted.

According to an advocacy group working with the family, a team of health-care professionals has been assembled that is willing to help the boy if he were brought home and placed in some sort of foster care.

The boy has been in his grandparents’ care since he was a toddler. His mother lost custody of him in British Columbia and his father was never in the picture.


With Patricia Brooks Arenburg,

staff reporter
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 26, 2010, 11:21:54 AM
A PRESS CONFERENCE WILL BE HELD for the family of a fifteen year old African Canadian youth who was residing in a treatment facility for conduct disordered children in South Eastern Ontario.

The family retained Restoring Dignity to investigate the Nova Scotia Department of Community Services handling of their grandson'...s case. Thursday’s press conference will discuss the current developments on the case and the youth’s return to the province of Nova Scotia.

In attendance will be Mr. Roch Longueépée, Founder & CEO, Restoring Dignity, Dr. Charles Emmerys, with, Dawe, Bates, Parlee & Associates (NB), Mr. Richard Bureau with the firm Morris Bureau, and the Firm Walker Dunlop will also be working with Restoring Dignity in the family's fight to return him to the family home.

WE ENCOURAGE EVERYONE TO ATTEND

Conference location: Westin Nova Scotia, Luneburg Room, Halifax, Nova Scotia, CanadaDate: Thursday August 26, 2010 Time: 12:00 PM
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: Dr. Acula on August 26, 2010, 11:29:44 AM
O0
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: Eliscu2 on August 26, 2010, 11:34:27 AM
:jamin:
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: Eliscu2 on August 26, 2010, 11:37:34 AM
:karma:
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: Octomommy on August 26, 2010, 11:48:14 AM
Quote from: "Eliscu2"
Quote from: "Eliscu2"
Quote from: "Dr. Acula"
Quote from: "wdtony"
A PRESS CONFERENCE WILL BE HELD for the family of a fifteen year old African Canadian youth who was residing in a treatment facility for conduct disordered children in South Eastern Ontario.

The family retained Restoring Dignity to investigate the Nova Scotia Department of Community Services handling of their grandson'...s case. Thursday’s press conference will discuss the current developments on the case and the youth’s return to the province of Nova Scotia.

In attendance will be Mr. Roch Longueépée, Founder & CEO, Restoring Dignity, Dr. Charles Emmerys, with, Dawe, Bates, Parlee & Associates (NB), Mr. Richard Bureau with the firm Morris Bureau, and the Firm Walker Dunlop will also be working with Restoring Dignity in the family's fight to return him to the family home.

WE ENCOURAGE EVERYONE TO ATTEND

Conference location: Westin Nova Scotia, Luneburg Room, Halifax, Nova Scotia, CanadaDate: Thursday August 26, 2010 Time: 12:00 PM
:suicide: EVIL JUST EVIL.......THERE ARE NO WORDS TO EXPRESS HOW EVIL THIS REALLY IS.
THIS IS THE WORK OF THE DEVIL....I KNOW IT.!!!!
ILLUMINATI HAVE DONE IT AGAIN IT JUST MAKES ME SICK! :on phone:  :on phone:  :on phone:  :on phone:
UUUUGHHHHH THIS IS EVIL JUST LIKE MARIJUANA AND FUN....JUST FUCKIN HARDCORE EVIL!!!
WHO THE HELL DO THOSE PUNKS THINK THEY ARE??? UGGGGH
THROW EM ALL IN THE MOSHPIT/TIMEMACHINE I SAY.
KILLEM ALL!
TESE PROGRAMS NEED A FUCKIN HOLY WAR.....
THIS IS WAY WORSE THAN DUBYA........
THOSE EVIL FUCKERS......OMG....SLAY THE GOVERNMENT....OY.....I'M FUCKIN MADDER THAN HELL FO SHO! :poison:  :clown:  :rasta:  ::unhappy::
:notworthy: Well what can I say that will top that?
These people mush be retarted faggots..... :roflmao:  O0  ::evil::
oh looky i have spellcheck dependency disorder syndrome disease....hmmmmm I refuse to give up my WINDOWS VISTA OR MY INTERNET EXPLORER...I WILL HAVE BAD SPELLING UNTIL I DIE!! :karma:  ::OMG::
:jamin: Well if I were Ziggy Marley (I am NOT) I would say you are a "CRAZY BITCH".......foshizzle!! Can I have another baby Because 8 is not enough and my Trailer park is full. :eek:
I feel like doing a re-make of Frank Zappa at this point....CATHOLIC GIRLS...
Maybe a "Watch out where the HUSKIES go and DON'T YO(P)U EAT THE SHITTY SNOW!!" SPICE IT UP A BIT! :soapbox:
AH FUCK NOW I HAVE A SPELLING DISORDER.....WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON AROUND HERE? :suicide:  :fuckoff:
Title: nothing
Post by: Eliscu2 on August 26, 2010, 12:54:09 PM
:seg2:
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 27, 2010, 11:09:16 AM
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/1198901.html (http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/1198901.html)

Grandmother will fight for access

Institutionalized treatment of troubled kids isn’t safe, doesn’t work, advocates say

By JEFFREY SIMPSON Provincial Reporter
Fri, Aug 27 (2010) - 6:50 AM


The grandmother of a troubled Cole Harbour teenager who was returned to Nova Scotia this week after being treated for behavioural disorders at a facility in Ontario says she’ll fight for access to the boy.

"We feel very discouraged and hurt this has been done to us," the woman, who can’t be named to protect the 15-year-old boy’s identity, told a news conference Thursday.

"I feel he’s still not safe."

The woman and her husband learned Tuesday through a letter from the provincial Community Services Department that their contact with their grandson had been suspended on the recommendation of the Ontario facility. The department said family contact had become an obstacle to the boy’s treatment.

The grandmother is intending to take the battle to court with the help of a group of advocates that includes Independent MLA Trevor Zinck, self-described child-abuse survivor Roch Longueepee, lawyer Richard Bureau and New Brunswick psychologist Charles Emmrys.

The group says the type of institutionalized care Nova Scotia provides doesn’t work, and it is proposing an alternative style of foster care that would also involve the grandparents.

The grandparents received a second letter from Community Services on Tuesday telling them their grandson had been transferred to a facility in Truro.

The boy’s grandmother said she and her husband, who have been the child’s primary caregivers since he was a toddler, plan to meet with provincial representatives today to discuss the matter.

"I have a right to be frustrated because of what has been done to us. Our family has been destroyed. We love our grandson," she said.

The teenager has alleged he was abused at the Ontario facility. Ontario Provincial Police wrapped up their investigation of those claims last week, said Community Services spokesman Lucas Wide.

"No charges were laid against the staff or the facility," he said.

"We trust the findings."

Wide couldn’t comment on specific aspects of the case because they’re confidential.

A spokesman for the boy’s family expressed anger and frustration in not being informed about the results of the Ontario police investigation.

The boy has been in the care of the Nova Scotia government since November 2008 when it was determined he was a threat to himself and the community. He suffers from various cognitive problems, but his grandmother and the family’s lawyer say there has never been a conclusive diagnosis.

Nova Scotia does not have a facility capable of addressing the teen’s needs. The province’s Supreme Court ruled last year that he could be sent away because all local treatment options had been exhausted.

Wide pointed out that the plan the family advocates had failed to sway the judge: "The judge agreed with the plan presented by the Department of Community Services," Wide said.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 27, 2010, 11:22:39 AM
http://www.metronews.ca/halifax/local/a ... h-province (http://www.metronews.ca/halifax/local/article/613462--family-of-teen-to-meet-with-province)

Family of teen to meet with province

Troubled youth was transferred back to Nova Scotia this week - Teen says he was abused in Ontario - Facility there now under investigation

ALEX BOUTILIER
METRO HALIFAX
Published: August 27, 2010 12:55 a.m.
Last modified: August 27, 2010 1:00 a.m.


The grandmother of a local teenager now being treated for behavioural difficulties in Truro says she doesn’t expect much from a meeting with the province on Friday.

The woman, who cannot be named to protect the 15-year-old’s identity, wants the province’s Department of Community Services to take the boy out of residential facilities and into a tailor-made foster care program.

She says without family contact, she doesn’t expect any rehabilitative treatment to be successful.

“Work with the child to come back home,” she said. “But work with the family. If you don’t work with the family, it won’t work.”

Community Services spokeswoman Vicki Wood could not speak to the specifics of the case, or confirm that communication between the family and the youth has been suspended.

She did say, however, that it is less common to suspend communication with older children in residential care than very young children.

The boy has been in provincial care since 2008, when it was determined he was a threat to himself and the community.

He was sent to Bayfield Homes, a residential facility in Ontario. The facility recommended suspending contact with the family.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 31, 2010, 01:04:26 PM
http://www.metronews.ca/halifax/canada/ ... nts--page0 (http://www.metronews.ca/halifax/canada/article/616417--troubled-n-s-boy-to-be-sent-to-grandparents--page0)

Troubled N.S. boy to be sent to grandparents

THE CANADIAN PRESS
Published: August 30, 2010 6:39 p.m.
Last modified: August 30, 2010 6:43 p.m.

 

 HALIFAX - The grandparents of a deeply troubled boy say they are thrilled the Nova Scotia government has decided to release him into their care after fighting for more than a year to get him sent home from a treatment facility in Ontario.

"When (he) hugged me, he didn't want to let go," the woman said in an interview after a court hearing in Nova Scotia.

"I felt bad for that child. What he went through, he didn't deserve that."

The 15-year-old boy's grandparents say the department has confirmed he will be returning home by Sept. 28.

The boy has been under the care of the Community Services Department since November 2008. Under provincial legislation, neither the boy or the grandparents can be identified.

The woman said she wasn't allowed to talk to the boy on Monday because provincial officials entrusted with caring for him believe she has interfered with his treatment for a series of conduct disorders.

"They're making me out to be the culprit," she said, noting that she and the boy's grandfather had cared for him since he was a toddler. "I've just worked to get him out of that situation. ... Anyone who has a child they love would have done the same thing."

A spokesman for the Nova Scotia government said the Community Services Department couldn't comment on any details in the case.

In July, the grandparents alleged the boy had been beaten by staff at the Ontario facility.They accused two male staff members of throwing him to the floor, punching him in the ribs and kneeing him in the throat, leaving him badly scratched and bruised.

An advocacy group known as Restoring Dignity took on the family's cause and pushed for a police investigation.

A spokesman for the facility declined to comment on the case, citing privacy concerns.

On Monday, the Ontario Provincial Police confirmed it had wrapped up its probe and no charges would be laid.

The boy's grandmother says she was shocked by the Nova Scotia government's sudden decision to send her grandson home.

"God answered our prayers," she said. "I'm overwhelmed."

The province has long insisted that the boy couldn't stay in Nova Scotia because the province doesn't have the resources to help him.A residential facility that can provide long-term, intensive treatment is still under construction in the Truro area.

The youth's story attracted national attention last year when Nova Scotia Supreme Court endorsed a plan to have him sent to a facility in Utah. That plan fell through, but the boy was eventually sent to the facility in Ontario.

The boy's grandfather said he and his wife are willing to work with the Community Services Department.

"We want a definite plan," he said. "Something that's going to work for him, including education and recreation. If we don't work with them, it's not going to work."

He said he met Monday with the boy, who was transferred from Ontario to a facility in Nova Scotia last week.

Roch Longueepee, founder of Restoring Dignity, a non-profit group that seeks justice for victims of institutional child abuse, said a specialized family based treatment program could have been set up for the boy in Nova Scotia.

"The province is still in love with the idea of institutions," he said. "They are failing our children."
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 31, 2010, 01:06:31 PM
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Front/9017704.html (http://thechronicleherald.ca/Front/9017704.html)

Troubled teen goes back to grandparents' care

By The Canadian Press
Mon, Aug 30 (2010) - 6:18 PM


The grandparents of a boy with cognitive challenges say the Nova Scotia government has decided to release him into their care more than a year after he was sent to a treatment facility in Ontario.

Officials in Nova Scotia have declined to comment on the case, but they had said they didn't have the resources to care for the 15-year-old boy.

The grandparents have been fighting to have the boy returned to Nova Scotia alleging he had been abused by staff at the Ontario facility.

Earlier in the day, the Ontario Provincial Police confirmed they wouldn't be laying any charges after investigating the allegations.

Last week, the boy was transferred to a treatment facility in his home province, and the grandparents say the Department of Community Services has confirmed the boy will be returning home by Sept. 28.

His grandparents say they've agreed to work with the department to draft a plan of care for the boy, who has been in the care of the Nova Scotia government since November 2008.

Under provincial legislation, there is a publication ban on the boy's identity.
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 31, 2010, 01:10:02 PM
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/nova-scotia/st ... z0yCG0WQyT (http://www.cbc.ca/canada/nova-scotia/story/2010/08/30/ns-no-charges-teen-abuse-allegation.html#ixzz0yCG0WQyT)


No charges in N.S. boy's abuse claim: police

Last Updated: Monday, August 30, 2010 | 1:52 PM AT
CBC News


Ontario Provincial Police say they won't lay charges after an investigation into allegations that a Nova Scotia teenage boy was abused at a treatment facility.

Sgt. Kristine Rae confirmed Monday that an investigation was held but there were no grounds to lay charges.

The 15-year-old was being treated for behavioural disorders at the Bayfield treatment centre in Consecon, just south of Trenton in eastern Ontario last year. The boy's grand-parents said the teen told them he had been abused during his stay at Bayfield.

He was recently discharged and sent to a treatment facility in Nova Scotia.

The boy is in the permanent care of the Nova Scotia Department of Community Services. He suffers from mental disorders and has been in conflict with the law.

Last year, he was sent to the Bayfield facility because Nova Scotia doesn't have the kind of treatment program he needs.

He suffers from various cognitive challenges, but his grandmother and the family's lawyer say there has never been a conclusive diagnosis.

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/nova-scotia/st ... z0yCjS9Zmq (http://www.cbc.ca/canada/nova-scotia/story/2010/08/30/ns-no-charges-teen-abuse-allegation.html#ixzz0yCjS9Zmq)
Title: Re: Police probe abuse complaint
Post by: wdtony on August 31, 2010, 01:12:07 PM
http://stephenkimber.com/2010/08/inquir ... t-end-well (http://stephenkimber.com/2010/08/inquiry-needed-into-childrens-stories-that-dont-end-well)

Inquiry needed into children’s stories that don’t end well

by Stephen Kimber on August 30, 2010  

I’ve been writing about child protection issues since 2004 when I got interested in the story of a Halifax couple embroiled in a highly publicized, 67-hour, shots-fired standoff with police. The issue: Children’s Aid had seized their five-month old daughter, not because of anything the couple had done to the child—in fact, evidence indicated they were loving, capable parents—but because they’d each been accused of abducting children during acrimonious custody battles in previous relationships.

Their story didn’t end well. The parents ended up in jail. Their daughter disappeared into the often self-serving anonymity of the province’s foster care system.

Then there was the story of the 16-year-old girl whose mental health issues were never addressed in foster or group homes. She ended up in court. The frustrated judge ordered the then-minister of community services—the girl’s legal guardian—to explain the mess. The minister never testified. Instead, the case was shuffled to the sidelines.

I caught up with the girl—now 18—last year. She told me she didn’t get any more help after her court case; instead, as soon as she turned 18, she was spit out into the adult welfare system. Good riddens.

Through her, I met a young man who’d been shipped off at the age of 12—against his parents’ wishes—to an Ontario residential treatment centre called Bayfield where he spent five years. Bayfield, he says, didn’t help. Instead, they prescribed drugs: he was on 13 medications at one point. Like the girl, Bayfield and child welfare washed its hands of him as soon as it could. The last I heard, he was living on the streets.

Which brings us to the current case: the 15-year-old Cole Harbour boy who was also sent to Bayfield. He didn’t do well either. Bayfield has now dumped him, but not before squeezing his grandparents/guardians out of his life—leaving the province, which claims it doesn’t have the facilities to treat him, to decide what to do next with him.

Whatever it does with the boy, the province should do something else; call a public inquiry into how we deal with troubled children and families. Something is clearly wrong.