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Topics - Deborah

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46
Aspen Education Group / AEG Cited by Bethel Church of God
« on: September 03, 2007, 12:28:22 AM »
AEG cited by

Bethel Church of God
Pastors: Bryce G. Clark & David L. Carter
The Fruits of Immorality
Sep 3rd, 2007 by Sean Pendergast

http://bethelcogfellowship.com:80/church/?p=75

The Aspen Education Group website reveals the extent that sexual promiscuity is becoming rampant among teenagers and pre-teenagers.  It refers to the statistics of The American Academy of Pediatrics, which points out  that 36.9 percent of 14-year olds have had sex, that is, more than one out of three, and 66.4 percent of 12th graders have had sex!  Along with this there are about 3 million cases of sexually transmitted diseases and about one million pregnancies. These youngsters are encouraged by school programs that distribute birth-control devices, and the result is that only one out of five teenagers will remain chaste during these early years.  Also, there are about nine million couples living together intimately without being married and the number of these couples has increased 72 percent in the last decade.  As far as homosexuality is concerned, studies indicate that more than three million people are involved in these liaisons, and a poll  taken in 1995 indicated that 90 percent of the nation believes that society should value “all types of families,â€

47
http://fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?p=276757#276757

August 21, 2007
The National Association Of Therapeutic Schools and Programs ("NATSAP") members across the United States are saddened by the shocking instance of abuse reported in today's ABC News story entitled "Boot Camp Pastor Charged in Girl's Dragging."

The National Association Of Therapeutic Schools and Programs ("NATSAP") members across the United States are saddened by the shocking instance of abuse reported in the ABC News story entitled "Boot Camp Pastor Charged in Girl's Dragging" (available at http://abcnews.go.com). Jan Moss, Executive Director of NATSAP says this report again points out the need for state licensure and oversight of the programs and schools that serve our struggling young people.

[Why not start with your own programs? So that's where NATSAP draws the line? It's okey dokey to abuse/neglect kids, but no dragging behind a vehicle.... that just crosses the line. Hard to defend. None of the favorite excuses can be applied. In order to be a NATSAP member a program must be more discrete with their abuse. :rofl: ]

"Our association and its members are supportive of all efforts to eliminate every so-called boot camp or other 'tough love' program that does not use a therapeutic milieu in working with adolescents," Moss says. "We continue to work with state and federal lawmakers and agencies to encourage, establish and strengthen state laws and regulations to protect children in need of out-of-home placement."

[Hmm. You advocated for self-regulation in Montana. You lobbied against a law that would protect kids being 'escorted' to programs. Some of the most heinous abuses have happened in your programs' "therapeutic milieus". "Therapeutic" abuse is somehow more acceptable?]

The NATSAP board of directors urges all parents and guardians who are seeking specialized help for their child to visit the organization's website, www.natsap.org, for important information regarding the selection of a program or school. NATSAP members ascribe to high ethical standards and principles of good practice, in addition to their licensure and accreditation requirements.

[Parents should check at Fornits, ISAC, HEAL, and google the program name for independent blogs where they'll get the 'hard truth' about the program they're considering and the industry in general. Buyer Beware. Your "high ethical standards/principles" are useless and have no teeth. Who investigates/sanctions your members?]

NATSAP extends its sincere sympathies to this young woman and any child or family who have experienced abuse or neglect in a facility reportedly designed to heal.

[NATSAP attempts to set themselves apart from non-member programs and capitalize on this young woman's tragedy.]

48
Tacitus' Realm / Controlling Free Speech with Panhandling Ordinance
« on: August 29, 2007, 08:12:56 PM »
Councilmember Jennifer Kim wants to outlaw panhandling in Austin (Tx)altogether.

Day Labor advocates...Businesses...Parents...Civil rights/civil liberties advocates...GLBT advocates...Religious leaders...Neighborhood advocates...Enviros...Non-profits...Associations...Artists...everyone!
This affects us all.

Stop fear mongering! Where are the FACTS that panhandlers impede student safety ? We already HAVE an ordinance against aggressive panhandling!

THE PROPOSED ORDINANCE CHANGES WILL EXTEND THE BAN ON SOLICITATION from downtown, 7pm-7am TO ALL OF AUSTIN -- and further ban it from certain areas, around the clock, which covers a good chunk of Austin. This DOESN'T JUST AFFECT PANHANDLERS/HOMELESS -- the proposed consequences, as currently drafted and as being discussed with Cmbr. Kim, have MUCH GREATER EFFECT. Such as:

---Pushing panhandlers further into neighborhoods
---Banning roadside solicitation -impending FREE SPEECH for EVERYONE--no non-profits/associations/ activist solicitation (depending on language and interpretation, we might be looking at "free speech zones" for demonstrations/not merely solicitations)
---Push day laborers away from schools (1000' is 3 football fields long); out of parking lots; where to go if they can't get to the "designated city center"?
---Expand and more subjectively define the aggressive solicitation ordinance -- such that "scaring" a child can be considered "aggressive." "That man is scary looking, mommy. Call 9-11." :p
---Exacerbate the desperate situations of those who can no longer petition their fellow citizens for assistance

And more importantly: the fear mongering that this generated that there are aggressive panhandlers harming our children (WITHOUT ONE SHRED OF EVIDENCE--no one has been ticketed at Travis HS as per the aggressive solicitation ordinance we already have...no incident documented--but what IS documented is hate crimes against the homeless) will only serve to exacerbate the problem and put our most vulnerable population at greater risk. THIS IS UNACCEPTABLE. Hate crime goes up against them...and then it goes up against the other vulnerable populations (GLBT, especially homeless youth) -- this is what happens when you continue to reactively make laws to address the perceived problem vs. come up with innovative/outside the box solutions.

If traffic is the issue at Travis HS--and kids are at risk b/c of the immense traffic flow across 35--why blame the panhandlers for that (the usual complaint is they slow the traffic down)? Why not hire an extra crossing guard or 2 - they can monitor that panhandlers don't harass students, if need be (no one has actually claimed they do harass students--in fact, more likely is it the other way around--teenagers trying to be cool and their City leaders telling them the homeless are second class citizens by trying to outlaw them).

There are probably 100 other possible solutions out there to address this issue other than expanding laws against the vulnerable. We can figure this out together and convince our Council of the collectively-decided best solutions.

49
Open Free for All / "Law of Parties"... Only in Texas
« on: August 28, 2007, 08:33:10 PM »
If you are a Texas resident, please say so in your call.
Takes less than 30 seconds. This man did not kill anyone and the State acknowledges that, nevertheless Foster is to be executed on Aug. 30th. Please call to try and spare his life. The secrataries are tallying the calls. Your call counts.

Governor Perry: 512-463-2000
The Pardons and Paroles Board: 512-406-5852
Calls from Texas but outside Austin: 800- 252-9600

"James & Van, ColorOfChange.org" wrote:

Subject: This man killed no one. Texas plans to kill him this Thursday.

Even though Kenneth Foster killed no one, Texas plans to execute him.
Kenneth Foster

Please call on the Governor and the Board of Pardons and Parole to
spare Kennenth Fosters life.

Dear Texas ColorOfChange.org member,
Thursday, the state of Texas plans to execute a man who it knows,
without a doubt, did not commit murder. This is not justice--it's insanity. Newspapers all over the state agree that this would be a serious mistake and have called on the Governor and the Board of Pardons and Paroles to spare Kenneth Foster's life.
Can you take a few minutes to make two phone calls to do the same?
Please call the Governor at 512-463-2000 and the Pardons and Paroles
Board at 936-291-2161 and ask them to spare Foster's life. Then
email [email protected] to let us know that you did. And pass this on.
Thank You and Peace,
-- James, Van, Gabriel, Clarissa, Mervyn, and the rest of the
ColorOfChange.org team

August 28th, 2007
References:
Editorial Boards
Not a Killer: Kenneth Foster does not deserve execution, Dallas
Morning News, August 26, 2007.
http://tinyurl.com/2tau5a
Backward Texas law may make man pay with life for deed he didn't do,
Austin American Statesman, July 28, 2007.
http://tinyurl.com/2f6gmh
Opinions Columns
An appointment with death despite the evidence, Star Telegram, July
29, 2007.
http://tinyurl.com/2yurg2
Executing this man is bloodlust, not justice, Waco Tribune, August
26, 2007.
http://tinyurl.com/2xry9f
In Texas, bad company can mean capital punishment, Express News,
August 27, 2007.
http://tinyurl.com/2e6mek
Background
Death debate centers on intent, August 25, 2007.
http://tinyurl.com/yotk9r
Getaway driver nears execution for '96 murder, August 20, 2007.
http://tinyurl.com/yuszo9
Wrong Place, Wrong Time: Texas prosecutors use the 'law of parties'
to widen the net for capital punishment, Feb. 11, 2005. http://
www.austinchronicle.com/gyrobase/Issue/ ... d%3A258647

50
Tacitus' Realm / Couple Arrested as Terrorists for Sprinkling Flour
« on: August 27, 2007, 01:43:54 PM »
Sunday, August 26, 2007
Couple arrested as terrorists for sprinking flour in parking lot
Beer runners' trail a recipe for trouble
Pair arrested after marking a powdery path through IKEA parking lot
The Associated Press
Updated: 6:56 p.m. MT Aug 25, 2007

NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Two people who sprinkled flour in a parking lot to mark a trail for their offbeat running club inadvertently caused a bioterrorism scare and now face a felony charge.

The sprinkled powder forced hundreds to evacuate an IKEA furniture store Thursday.

New Haven ophthalmologist Daniel Salchow, 36, and his sister, Dorothee, 31, who is visiting from Hamburg, Germany, were both charged with first-degree breach of peace, a felony.

The siblings set off the scare while organizing a run for a local chapter of the Hash House Harriers, a worldwide group that bills itself as a “drinking club with a running problem.â€

51
August 21, 2007

Just a quick note to let you all know of our expanded services under our official new name, Advantage Adolescent and Interim Services (Advantage AAIS) which is under our corporate company of Advantage ISS Inc. (Advantage Investigations and Security Services)

We have been in business under Advantage ISS Inc. doing Private Investigations and successful Adolescent Runaway Interventions throughout the Northwest since Oct. 2005. We have just recently included all of our adolescent services under Advantage AAIS.

We are still the same people you have come to know and trust working out of the same North Idaho offices. We continue to offer compassionate, caring and confidential services for adolescents and their families. These services include Adolescent Escort/Transports, Runaway Interventions and Interim Care. The only noticeable change is our expanded capacity and services available for short term Interim Care and Runaway Interventions. We can now offer Interim Care for students between programs, programs and home, home and program, etc.. This can be a short overnight stay to extended stays of a month to three months with academic and therapeutic services available if needed. The ages we work with are from 13 years of age to over 18 year old young adults, both male and female.

If you have any questions at all, feel free to call me anytime. We are always here to be of service to you and the families you work with.

Sincerely,
Chuck Selent
Owner and Director of Operations
Advantage AAIS
208-267-5807

Anyone have time to check to see if this yahoo's Interim Program is licensed as an RTC? I'm not certain Idaho DHS provides a list of licensed programs.

More on Selent- ex CEDU
http://wwf.fornits.com/viewtopic.php?p=139984#139984
http://fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?p=45045#45045

52
Web forum hosting / Problems
« on: August 16, 2007, 02:19:58 PM »
After you've gotten some much needed rest.........

the search function isn't working.
Searching "fire" in the HLA forum only two posts show up, both posted on 16 Aug, after the move. There should be many more containing that search term.

Or search Scheff in the Whitmore forum and you get 0 returns. You know that ain't right. Apparently nothings been posted containing her name since the latest move.
Thanks

53
Web forum hosting / Here's a weird one
« on: August 11, 2007, 01:37:59 PM »
Had fornits open but was in another window. The fornits window starting blinking and changed to an ad for Sketchers.

54
Web forum hosting / Bat Cave
« on: August 09, 2007, 03:55:42 PM »
Bat Cave's not functioning

55
Oh wow. Another 'criminal' in recovery who wants to get into the helping business. Hope he sees the light and comes to his senses. What is it about these new agey, spiritual people who send their kids to the desert to be tortured? I have to wonder if they are unaware of the reality of what's happening to their kid or if they condone it. I can't imagine the latter is true, but stranger things.... I mean... what's spiritual about depriving kids of food as punishment or forcing them to eat raw grains and legumes, and march/sleep in scorching/frigid temperatures? They can't possibly know the truth, can they?

Saturday, August 4, 2007
A Family Reunites, A Vision Unfolds

What a week . . .

Got up last Sunday morning, hit a meeting where a guy celebrated 20 years clean & sober, cut off the bracelet, hit the beach to marry a couple of friends of mine, and then headed off to the mountains of North Carolina for my son's graduation from SUWS of the Carolinas, the therapeutic wilderness camp where he spent seven weeks primitive camping  ::roflmao:: in the Pisgah National Forest. A painful 10-hour car ride (I dread such travel), but expectations were high . . .

On Monday, a day-long seminar, along with the parents of 15 other graduating teens, all facing different specific circumstances, but all of us nonetheless in the same boat. A very informative day, learning why our kids are the way they are, what SUWS had been doing to bring them back to their center, and what we could do to assist them in their recovery from this point forward. A lot of empathetic bonding going on . . .

On Tuesday, reunification with our kids. Lots of hugs, lots of smiles, some tears, some tensions (mostly revolving around the issue of therapeutic boarding school as the next step for some), but mostly a palpable sense of relief-- the kids we remember were back from the deep and dark pit that brought them to SUWS. We could see it, we could hear it, we could feel it. Hope was in the air . . .

We all spent the day together out in the woods, learning skills, sitting in truth circles, sharing our fears and hopes, working through all that brought us to SUWS and all we hoped to take away. Towards the end of the day, we broke off into family solos for some quiet time together, some dinner, and a final therapy session with the counselor who guided our son through this experience. A sublime end to an emotional day . . .

Wednesday, we woke, we ate, we enjoyed a morning feast of of coffee, muffins, and yogurt, we gathered for a final truth circle, where we shared our rose (best part of the experience), our thorn (worst part of the experience), and our bud (biggest hope moving forward), and then we proceeded to a solemn and beautiful graduation ritual in a sun-dappled glade before a crackling fire. Mystical, wonderful, powerful . . .

Later that day, another 10-hour drive back home. Ugh. But I had profoundly good reading material-- The Spirituality of Imperfection: Storytelling and the Journey to Wholeness, by Ernest Kurtz & Katherine Ketcham-- and I had my little boy back. The wilderness had worked its magic once again . . .

Wilderness . . .

I've always been an earthy, crunchy sort, sometimes openly and unabashedly, sometimes in more muted form, depending upon my circumstances at the time. Nature, for me, has always been the ultimate expression of the divine, the true cathedral. Nothing else even came close. So I knew where to send my boys when they needed help. Nature has been there for me, and it saved both my boys, brought them back to their centers, and re-directed them in a positive way . . .

After my oldest son went through SUWS, I did an internet search on wilderness therapy, to see how one trains to do this work. This was special stuff. Potent. Powerful. I was curious. Intrigued. My research gave rise to one program in particular that appeared to stand above all others-- the Masters program in Transpersonal Counseling Psychology, with a Wilderness Concentration, at Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado. A 3-year program, it combines clinical and academic coursework, wilderness training, personal awareness and therapeutic work, and professional experience in a one-of-a-kind program that trains one to do this work by not only teaching them about it, but also putting them through it. Experiential school, if you will. School plus. The outside job and the inside job, all in one. Putting into practice Morpheus's words to Neo near the beginning of the Matrix: "There's a difference between knowing the path and walking the path" . . .

As interesting as I thought it might be, though, I didn't give any real thought to actually pursuing this path, as I was already firmly and successfully on my way as a criminal defense attorney. Still, the seed was planted. And then I hit my bottom, began the journey of recovery, and quit practicing law . . .

Enter into the picture my younger son's counselor at SUWS, a guy with whom I share a great many similarities. We're about the same age. I'm 19 months into recovery; he'll soon celebrate 8 years. We both lifeguarded on the beach in Ocean City, Maryland. We're both interested in the same approaches to the spiritual life. And, come to find, he's a graduate of Naropa University's Wilderness Therapy program, a member of the second class to go through the program. We connected, and it got me thinking about Naropa again . . .

This past Tuesday evening, after our last family session, I began to ask this guy a number of pointed questions about the Wilderness Therapy program at Naropa. What was the age range of participants? What prerequisite preparations needed to be in place? What was the program like, from his perspective? The epiphany moment arrived, however, when I asked whether this type of program, so successful with troubled teens, had ever been applied in the realm of adults. "No," he said, looking up at me. "But it should be" . . .

Bam! All of a sudden, my mind's flying with thoughts about the War on Drugs, the fact that we lock up hundreds upon thousands of non-violent drug offenders every year in federal and state prisons, and the extent to which wilderness therapy might constitute a viable sentencing alternative for some. Perhaps this is a way for me to take my legal experience, my political experience, and my recovery experience, and combine it with a masters from Naropa and work in the wilderness therapy field as a means of bringing this idea to fruition. Perhaps . . .

Ok. Slow down. I'm 41. I'm on a bracelet 'til October 24th. I'm on probation 'til October 20th of '08. I've got one son going into his senior year and possibly onward to college after that. I've got another son entering 9th grade. I own a house here at the beach in Maryland. I've got a good job with a company full of great people. Relax. Let the idea sit. Pray on it. Meditate on it. If this is meant to be, God'll let me know. I just need to keep doing what I'm doing and be open to the messages . . .

And the messages start to come. On Thursday, I head up to Baltimore to get the bracelet put back on, and I share with my agent this idea that's popped into my head. She looks at me, points to my ankle, and says, "You see that bracelet on your ankle? That started out as an idea in somebody's head." As I'm leaving, she tells me it sounds like I've got a plan. Then, as I'm returning to the Shore, crossing the Bay Bridge, listening to NPR, I hear a story about two young guys, Vista volunteers, teaching poor kids in the Mississippi Delta, who got the idea in their head that the U.S. should have a civilian public service academy analogous to the military service academies like West Point and Annapolis, where high school kids would go upon receiving a congressional appointment, and then serve for 5 years in civilian service positions across the country. Now these guys have got Senator Hillary Clinton sponsoring legislation to create this academy, and a whole slew of other Senators and Congresspersons signing on. Perhaps God's trying to tell me something. Perhaps this idea's worth pursuing. Expanding wilderness therapy programs into the realm of adult non-violent drug offenders as an alternative to incarceration. Perhaps . . .
[No!! that's the devil. God told me tell you that he doesn't condone SUWS or similar programs that abuse kids in the desert under the guise of 'therapy'.]

But faith without works is dead. As Socrates once said, "Let him who would move the world, first move himself." If I have an interest in doing this, I need to point myself in that direction and take action. Devise a plan. Might as well. If there is one thing I have learned in recovery, it is that I have control over what I do now, but I do not have control over the outcome. So, if I have an interest in this, I might as well try. It might happen. It might not. But I'll never know unless I take action and try . . .

So what now? I need to pick up three psychology prerequisites- Abnormal Psych, Developmental Psych, and Theories of Personality. My research, however, indicates that I can't take those without first taking Intro to Psych. So I'm setting myself up to take this course online with our local community college this fall. Beyond that, I need to brush up on my wilderness skills and do a wilderness experience of at least 14 consecutive days. Perhaps after the bracelet comes off, I can study some with this guy in nearby New Jersey, and, perhaps next summer, I can do a 14-day field course here, out in Utah. Beyond that, I just need to keep doing what I'm doing, walking this spiritual path, staying clean and sober, staying in the moment, doing the next right thing . . .
[First link to Tom Brown's survival school. Second to BOSS. Totally conflicting philosophies!!! Stick with Tom Brown, who is really about teaching, and stay away from the ego maniacs at BOSS. Although if he takes the course Dave did
http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.ph ... 194#269194
he'll get a better idea of what your sons went through.]


Who knows if this will ever come to pass? A lot of additional doors have to open beyond the psych pre-reqs and the wilderness prep. There's the financial end, the family end, the spectre of relocation. Seems like an insurmountable mountain. But, still, it seems pretty cool, and it's got me excited . . .

Father, Mother, Greater Oneness of All that Is, Great Spirit, God . . . if this is what you want me to do, then be with me, guide me, show me the way . . . open the doors, and I'll walk through them . . . make it happen, and I'll ride the wave . . .

Amen, Namaste, Om . . .

http://oceanshaman.blogspot.com/2007/08 ... folds.html

56
Oh wow. Another 'criminal' in recovery who wants to get into the helping business. Hope he sees the light and comes to his senses. What is it about these new agey, spiritual people who send their kids to the desert to be tortured? I have to wonder if they are unaware of the reality of what's happening to their kid or if they condone it. I can't imagine the latter is true, but stranger things.... I mean... what's spiritual about depriving kids of food as punishment or forcing them to eat raw grains and legumes, and march/sleep in scorching/frigid temperatures? They can't possibly know the truth, can they?

Saturday, August 4, 2007
A Family Reunites, A Vision Unfolds

What a week . . .

Got up last Sunday morning, hit a meeting where a guy celebrated 20 years clean & sober, cut off the bracelet, hit the beach to marry a couple of friends of mine, and then headed off to the mountains of North Carolina for my son's graduation from SUWS of the Carolinas, the therapeutic wilderness camp where he spent seven weeks primitive camping  ::roflmao:: in the Pisgah National Forest. A painful 10-hour car ride (I dread such travel), but expectations were high . . .

On Monday, a day-long seminar, along with the parents of 15 other graduating teens, all facing different specific circumstances, but all of us nonetheless in the same boat. A very informative day, learning why our kids are the way they are, what SUWS had been doing to bring them back to their center, and what we could do to assist them in their recovery from this point forward. A lot of empathetic bonding going on . . .

On Tuesday, reunification with our kids. Lots of hugs, lots of smiles, some tears, some tensions (mostly revolving around the issue of therapeutic boarding school as the next step for some), but mostly a palpable sense of relief-- the kids we remember were back from the deep and dark pit that brought them to SUWS. We could see it, we could hear it, we could feel it. Hope was in the air . . .

We all spent the day together out in the woods, learning skills, sitting in truth circles, sharing our fears and hopes, working through all that brought us to SUWS and all we hoped to take away. Towards the end of the day, we broke off into family solos for some quiet time together, some dinner, and a final therapy session with the counselor who guided our son through this experience. A sublime end to an emotional day . . .

Wednesday, we woke, we ate, we enjoyed a morning feast of of coffee, muffins, and yogurt, we gathered for a final truth circle, where we shared our rose (best part of the experience), our thorn (worst part of the experience), and our bud (biggest hope moving forward), and then we proceeded to a solemn and beautiful graduation ritual in a sun-dappled glade before a crackling fire. Mystical, wonderful, powerful . . .

Later that day, another 10-hour drive back home. Ugh. But I had profoundly good reading material-- The Spirituality of Imperfection: Storytelling and the Journey to Wholeness, by Ernest Kurtz & Katherine Ketcham-- and I had my little boy back. The wilderness had worked its magic once again . . .

Wilderness . . .

I've always been an earthy, crunchy sort, sometimes openly and unabashedly, sometimes in more muted form, depending upon my circumstances at the time. Nature, for me, has always been the ultimate expression of the divine, the true cathedral. Nothing else even came close. So I knew where to send my boys when they needed help. Nature has been there for me, and it saved both my boys, brought them back to their centers, and re-directed them in a positive way . . .

After my oldest son went through SUWS, I did an internet search on wilderness therapy, to see how one trains to do this work. This was special stuff. Potent. Powerful. I was curious. Intrigued. My research gave rise to one program in particular that appeared to stand above all others-- the Masters program in Transpersonal Counseling Psychology, with a Wilderness Concentration, at Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado. A 3-year program, it combines clinical and academic coursework, wilderness training, personal awareness and therapeutic work, and professional experience in a one-of-a-kind program that trains one to do this work by not only teaching them about it, but also putting them through it. Experiential school, if you will. School plus. The outside job and the inside job, all in one. Putting into practice Morpheus's words to Neo near the beginning of the Matrix: "There's a difference between knowing the path and walking the path" . . .

As interesting as I thought it might be, though, I didn't give any real thought to actually pursuing this path, as I was already firmly and successfully on my way as a criminal defense attorney. Still, the seed was planted. And then I hit my bottom, began the journey of recovery, and quit practicing law . . .

Enter into the picture my younger son's counselor at SUWS, a guy with whom I share a great many similarities. We're about the same age. I'm 19 months into recovery; he'll soon celebrate 8 years. We both lifeguarded on the beach in Ocean City, Maryland. We're both interested in the same approaches to the spiritual life. And, come to find, he's a graduate of Naropa University's Wilderness Therapy program, a member of the second class to go through the program. We connected, and it got me thinking about Naropa again . . .

This past Tuesday evening, after our last family session, I began to ask this guy a number of pointed questions about the Wilderness Therapy program at Naropa. What was the age range of participants? What prerequisite preparations needed to be in place? What was the program like, from his perspective? The epiphany moment arrived, however, when I asked whether this type of program, so successful with troubled teens, had ever been applied in the realm of adults. "No," he said, looking up at me. "But it should be" . . .

Bam! All of a sudden, my mind's flying with thoughts about the War on Drugs, the fact that we lock up hundreds upon thousands of non-violent drug offenders every year in federal and state prisons, and the extent to which wilderness therapy might constitute a viable sentencing alternative for some. Perhaps this is a way for me to take my legal experience, my political experience, and my recovery experience, and combine it with a masters from Naropa and work in the wilderness therapy field as a means of bringing this idea to fruition. Perhaps . . .

Ok. Slow down. I'm 41. I'm on a bracelet 'til October 24th. I'm on probation 'til October 20th of '08. I've got one son going into his senior year and possibly onward to college after that. I've got another son entering 9th grade. I own a house here at the beach in Maryland. I've got a good job with a company full of great people. Relax. Let the idea sit. Pray on it. Meditate on it. If this is meant to be, God'll let me know. I just need to keep doing what I'm doing and be open to the messages . . .

And the messages start to come. On Thursday, I head up to Baltimore to get the bracelet put back on, and I share with my agent this idea that's popped into my head. She looks at me, points to my ankle, and says, "You see that bracelet on your ankle? That started out as an idea in somebody's head." As I'm leaving, she tells me it sounds like I've got a plan. Then, as I'm returning to the Shore, crossing the Bay Bridge, listening to NPR, I hear a story about two young guys, Vista volunteers, teaching poor kids in the Mississippi Delta, who got the idea in their head that the U.S. should have a civilian public service academy analogous to the military service academies like West Point and Annapolis, where high school kids would go upon receiving a congressional appointment, and then serve for 5 years in civilian service positions across the country. Now these guys have got Senator Hillary Clinton sponsoring legislation to create this academy, and a whole slew of other Senators and Congresspersons signing on. Perhaps God's trying to tell me something. Perhaps this idea's worth pursuing. Expanding wilderness therapy programs into the realm of adult non-violent drug offenders as an alternative to incarceration. Perhaps . . .
[No!! that's the devil. God told me tell you that he doesn't condone SUWS or similar programs that abuse kids in the desert under the guise of 'therapy'.]

But faith without works is dead. As Socrates once said, "Let him who would move the world, first move himself." If I have an interest in doing this, I need to point myself in that direction and take action. Devise a plan. Might as well. If there is one thing I have learned in recovery, it is that I have control over what I do now, but I do not have control over the outcome. So, if I have an interest in this, I might as well try. It might happen. It might not. But I'll never know unless I take action and try . . .

So what now? I need to pick up three psychology prerequisites- Abnormal Psych, Developmental Psych, and Theories of Personality. My research, however, indicates that I can't take those without first taking Intro to Psych. So I'm setting myself up to take this course online with our local community college this fall. Beyond that, I need to brush up on my wilderness skills and do a wilderness experience of at least 14 consecutive days. Perhaps after the bracelet comes off, I can study some with this guy in nearby New Jersey, and, perhaps next summer, I can do a 14-day field course here, out in Utah. Beyond that, I just need to keep doing what I'm doing, walking this spiritual path, staying clean and sober, staying in the moment, doing the next right thing . . .
[First link to Tom Brown's survival school. Second to BOSS. Totally conflicting philosophies!!! Stick with Tom Brown, who is really about teaching, and stay away from the ego maniacs at BOSS. Although if he takes the course Dave did
http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.ph ... 194#269194
he'll get a better idea of what your sons went through.]


Who knows if this will ever come to pass? A lot of additional doors have to open beyond the psych pre-reqs and the wilderness prep. There's the financial end, the family end, the spectre of relocation. Seems like an insurmountable mountain. But, still, it seems pretty cool, and it's got me excited . . .

Father, Mother, Greater Oneness of All that Is, Great Spirit, God . . . if this is what you want me to do, then be with me, guide me, show me the way . . . open the doors, and I'll walk through them . . . make it happen, and I'll ride the wave . . .

Amen, Namaste, Om . . .

http://oceanshaman.blogspot.com/2007/08 ... folds.html

57
This young woman experienced in all fraudulent dx, excess rx drugs, attempted suicide, accidental overdose, wilderness "therapy", and rehab. How many others?

Aug 3 2007 3:58 PM EDT

Mental-Health Care Reform Advocate Gogo Lidz: You Need To Know Me
Following a bad diagnosis, the then-teen was prescribed more than a dozen drugs — the exact opposite of what she needed.
By Jennifer Vineyard

RED HOOK, New York — When Gogo Lidz first went to a child psychiatrist in eighth grade, she got a one-word diagnosis — adolescence. The second time, when she was a sophomore in high school, she wasn't so lucky.
"During my first session, the doctor wanted to screen me for ADD, so he started asking me, 'Do you make careless mistakes? Do you get sidetracked? Do you have trouble following through on things?' " the 22-year-old recalled. "And I started going, 'Yeah, yeah, all of them,' because I felt like he was talking from my playbook."

In hindsight, she realized, "Everyone makes careless mistakes, everyone gets sidetracked." She said she shouldn't have agreed so easily because the next thing she knew, she had a diagnosis of Attention Deficit Disorder. At first, she was told to take Ritalin.

(Watch Gogo Lidz tell her story of misdiagnosis and overmedication.) at this link
http://www.mtv.com:80/news/articles/156 ... ndex.jhtml

It's become a common story for kids growing up in America these days: If you have trouble concentrating in school (and especially if your grades have dropped), you're a candidate for an ADD diagnosis. But as it turns out, Gogo didn't have ADD — she was bipolar. Instead of making her better, the increasing number of prescription drugs she was given made her progressively worse. So now Gogo is writing a book, tentatively titled "Life on the Pharm," about what happened to her, as a cautionary tale.

"I feel like my story will help other people know what's going on," she said. "The point of my book is not to portray me as a victim, but to raise questions about what these doctors are doing, because there are a lot of people who trust doctors with their lives. Doctors are supposed to make you better, pills are supposed to make you better. People don't think that maybe it's making you worse."

Granted — and Gogo is the first to admit it — not everything was the fault of her doctor.  :roll: Rather than asking questions when she didn't understand his instructions or warnings about possible side effects, she would nod dumbly as he used phrases like cyclothymia (mood disorders) or acute dystonia (muscle spasms). It made no sense to her, so she didn't think that consuming alcohol and marijuana might blur the line between symptoms and side effects. At times, it was hard to tell what drug was causing what reaction. Over the course of five years, her doctor responded by prescribing her even more medication — Metadate, Dextrostat, Dexedrine Spansules, Adderall, Adderall XR, Stattera, Effexor, Zyprexa, Ambien, Abilify, Lexapro, Lamictal, Provigil, Wellbutrin and Cymbalta. If that list sounds as confusing as it looks, try to imagine the effect it had on Gogo's system.

"I felt like I was going from being near-sighted to having X-ray vision," she said. "At first, it made it so much easier to do work, but after awhile, I just started losing weight rapidly. I wasn't able to sleep. I would get angry all the time. I was getting incredibly manic. I was driving everybody nuts. I'd become a tweaked-out whiz kid in one sense, and in the other, I was sort of like a monster."

Nothing was helping. The anti-anxiety drugs made her anxious; the sleep aids made it harder for her to sleep; the anti-depressive drugs made her depressed, even suicidal; and the anti-psychotic drugs made her psychotic. And then there were the hard-to-ignore physical side effects. Four weeks into her second semester at college, she took a muscle relaxant for menstrual cramps and had a near-cardiac arrest, thanks to the drug's interaction with her prescribed stimulant Adderall XR. She had to be taken, unconscious, to the emergency room. (The following year, Adderall XR was temporarily taken off the market in Canada due to the risk of sudden death.)

Still, she didn't question the prescriptions or her doctor. Her psychiatrist had warned her to stop taking the drugs if she became manic — but he didn't define the term, so she didn't recognize the symptoms. "I had a roommate who used to be manic, and I thought, 'Well, I'm not like her, so I must not be,' " she said. "But it's a different definition than what I now see that it was." Manic for Gogo meant it was hard for her to keep still and even harder to stop talking. By the end of the day, she'd curl up in bed and cry for a long time. "I felt like killing myself," she said.

So she tried. Twice. Unable to control her impulses, Gogo overdosed on painkillers and slashed her wrists with broken glass. "I was just on a roller coaster of manic episodes and depressive episodes," she said. "If I thought of something, I'd have to do it. I thought of killing myself, like, 10 minutes beforehand. It wasn't something I had planned for days. It would just be, 'This is what I'm doing now.' I didn't think it through."

[Good ol Program "therapy".][/color]

Now Gogo thinks that her doctor sent her to rehab to cover up his mistake of overprescribing her amphetamines and antidepressants. Once she sought a second opinion in rehab, the psychologist realized Gogo was actually bipolar and that the drugs she was on were the wrong treatment — the exact opposite of what someone who is bipolar should take. "I'd been stuck in this Catch-22," Gogo said. "I went through this giant ordeal, which made me crazy, and finally I was vindicated. If it had been caught earlier, I wouldn't have had to go through all that."

About to finish her senior year at Bard College in upstate New York this fall, Gogo first shared her story earlier this year in an article for New York magazine called "My Adventures in Psychopharmacology."
[ http://nymag.com/news/features/260006/ ]
The piece led to the book, which has a tentative May release date. It also made her the poster child for the mental-health care reform movement, since her experience exposes the need for more evidence-based medicine, patient/doctor face time, monitoring of side effects and consumer education about psychiatric treatments.

"I'm not anti-prescription, I'm not anti-drugs," Gogo emphasized. "It was just that I had blindly put my faith in my doctor for years. I just assumed he knew what he was doing — he's a doctor, you're supposed to trust a doctor."

More than anything now, Gogo has learned to trust herself, to know when something just doesn't feel right, and to get the right kind of help. "Who I was then is not who I am now. I'm better now."

58
The Troubled Teen Industry / Mitt Romney and the Teen Hurt Industry
« on: August 03, 2007, 11:22:33 AM »
The connect between Romney and WWASP/The Industry
http://wwf.fornits.com/viewtopic.php?p=272596#272596
http://wwf.fornits.com/viewtopic.php?p=267087#267087
http://wwf.fornits.com/viewtopic.php?p=271690#271690

is getting clearer.

Prez Candidate Bios
Mitt Romney – (R)
Overview

Mitt Romney was born on March 12, 1947 in Detroit, Michigan. He was the son of former Michigan Governor George W. Romney. His parents were well endowed in politics. He went to Stanford University for two quarters. After this period of time, he served as a missionary for the Mormon Church (The Church Of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints). He was a missionary for 2 and half years (30 months) before returning to America from his time as a missionary in France. He then transferred to Brigham Young University. In 1975, Romney went to Harvard Law School and Harvard Business School, earning a joint JD/MBA. After Romney’s graduation, he went to work for the Boston Consulting Group, which was a consulting firm. After this, from 1978 to 1984, Romney was vice president of Bain & Company, another consulting firm. Romney left Bain & Company in 1984 to be one of the http://wwf.fornits.com/viewtopic.php?p=252298#252298[/url]
http://wwf.fornits.com/viewtopic.php?p=219960#219960

which was an investment firm. After 6 years, he returned to Bain & Company, which was teetering on the edge of financial collapse, so to speak. After his 1 year tenure at Bain & Company as CEO, they were back to a company that was well off financially. Romney returned to Bain Capital after that period of time. During this time, they founded, invested, or acquired in many companies like Staples, Sports Authority, and Domino’s. He left Bain Capital to charge the Salt Lake City Olympics Committee. And by charge, I mean take control. There were plans to scale down the games, but after Romney took control, it was all better. He donated the $825,000 he made to charity. President Bush praised Romney for his handling of the Olympics. And the games made a $100,000,000 profit even after the financial shortfalls in the beginning. In 1994, Mitt Romney ran for the Senate against Ted Kennedy. He lost by 17%. In 2002, Mitt Romney ran for Massachusetts Governor. He won by 5%. He mandated that all people residing in Massachusetts get health care. If it is affordable, then they have to get it. Romney instead of raising taxes, he got out of Massachusetts deficit by lowering spending. He sent letters out to Congressmen and Congresswomen and to Senate members to vote for the proposed amendment to ban gay marriage. He did not run for a second term as Governor of Massachusetts.

Political Views
Romney is pro-life, even though he had some toleration of abortion during his 2002 campaign for Governor of Massachusetts. He says his views on abortion have “evolved and deepened” during his time as Governor. He vetoed a stem cell research bill because it allowed the cloning of human embryos. He would require people on welfare to work. Romney highly opposes gay marriage, and he opposes civil unions. Romney says “marriage is a sacred institution between man and women.” He wants to put a gay marriage ban into the Republican Party platform. Romney also says “every child deserves a mother and a father.” He wants schools to teach family values, but not prayer and religion in school. He supports the death penalty for murders like John Couey. He is for gun control. He supports educational vouchers to be used towards other schools. He does not want illegal immigrants gain a “path to citizenship.” He does not want to pull out of Iraq saying “it would be a big mistake.” Romney wants to develop alternative energy, but he wants to drill in the Arctic. He would require welfare recipients to work.
http://civilitas.wordpress.com/presiden ... date-bios/

59
The Troubled Teen Industry / Steve Wilkos Show
« on: August 02, 2007, 11:21:16 AM »
Host Of New TV Series Looking For Parents With Teens With Problems
Gabe Griggs, Producer
The Steve Wilkos Show
877-836-3424
[email protected]
~~

Who is Steve Wilkos? I didn't know.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Wilkos
Steve Wilkos (born Steven John Wilkos on March 9, 1964), originally from Chicago, Illinois, is the director of security on The Jerry Springer Show. On many occasions he substitutes for Springer as host of The Jerry Springer Show. On January 17, 2007, it was announced that Steve Wilkos will be set to leave The Jerry Springer Show and will host a talk show of his own, set to be produced by NBC.

60
While searching for an update on the death at Aspen's Youth Care
http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.ph ... 595#268595

I found an interesting item describing the relationship between Aspen their programs. Very WWWASPish. Another interesting fact came out of this- Ca school districts are prohibited statutorily from placing and paying for a child to attend an out-of-state "for-profit" program.

Page 1
BEFORE THE OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS SPECIAL EDUCATION DIVISION STATE OF CALIFORNIA
In the Matter of:
STUDENT,Petitioner, vs. YUCAIPA-CALIMESA JOINT UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT and
SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF BEHAVIORAL HEALTH, Respondents. OAH NO. N2005070683 DECISION

This matter came on regularly for hearing, before Administrative Law Judge Roy W. Hewitt, Office of Administrative Hearings, at Yucaipa, California on September 2 and 6, 2005. Student (student) was represented by advocate Jillian Bonnington. Ms. Gail Lindberg, program manager for the East Valley Special Education Local Plan Area, represented the Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District (district). Scott M. Runyan, Esq. represented the San Bernardino County Department of Behavioral Health (DBH). Oral and documentary evidence was received, the record was left open, and the matter was continued for good cause to allow the parties to submit written closing arguments/ briefs. The parties’ written arguments/briefs were received, read, and considered, and the matter was deemed submitted on September 27, 2005. During the continuance period, from the date the parties rested their cases, September 7, 2005 until the matter was deemed submitted on September 27, 2005, petitioner filed the
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following motions: a motion for reconsideration of the denial of petitioner’s motion for a “stay put” order; and a motion for sanctions against the district. Those motions and the briefs filed by respondents in opposition were read and considered. The rulings on the motions follow:

1. Petitioner’s motion for reconsideration of her “stay put” request is denied. Petitioner’s original motion for a “stay put” order was heard, and denied, by ALJ William O. Hoover on July 29, 2005. Petitioner then filed a motion for reconsideration of ALJ Hoover’s order. That motion for reconsideration was heard on the record, and denied, by ALJ Hewitt on the first day of the hearing, September 2, 2005. Petitioner’s current motion for reconsideration of ALJ Hoover’s and ALJ Hewitt’s rulings was filed on September 14, 2005. This, petitioner’s third attempt to obtain a “stay put” order, also fails. The basis for denial of petitioner’s current motion for reconsideration will become evident from the facts, conclusions, and order resulting from the instant due process hearing.
2. Petitioner’s motion for sanctions against the district is also denied based on petitioner’s failure to present competent evidence that district representatives engaged in any bad faith actions during the instant litigation.

PROPOSED ISSUES
1. Was petitioner provided with a Free and Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) from June 6, 2005 through the present?
2. Did respondents properly implement and fund student’s Individualized Education Plan (IEP) as described in the June 6, 2005 and June 27, 2005 IEP documents?
3. Did respondents offer services and instruction designed to meet student’s unique needs? 4. Is the district obligated to fund student’s current placement if DBH is statutorily prohibited from funding the placement?

INTRODUCTION The reason the previous section is titled “proposed issues” is because all of the issues delineated by petitioner really hinge on one, key issue. All parties agree on the relevant underlying facts. The key issue is whether, given the facts of the instant case, respondents are statutorily prohibited from funding student’s current placement. If so, then respondents have not “denied” student a FAPE because, they have no discretion to “deny” funding the placement. If, however, respondents are not statutorily prohibited from funding petitioner’s current placement then DBH is ready and willing to fund petitioner’s placement, retroactive to June 6, 2005.
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Page 3
ISSUE 1. Are respondents statutorily prohibited from funding student’s current placement? FACTUAL FINDINGS 1. Student, whose date of birth is May 4, 1989, is a 16-year-old female.
2. Student attended school in the district during the 2002-2003 and 2003-2004 school years. During these periods student was not identified as a special education student.
3. Student’s parents are currently separated and student’s mother has sole legal and physical custody of student.
4. In 2004, student’s mother relocated student to Arizona. Student’s parents remained in California. On December 19, 2004, student’s mother placed student at Youth Care, Inc. (Youth Care) due to student’s emotional instability. Youth Care is a Delaware corporation located in, and doing business in, Draper, Utah. Youth Care is a group home/ residential care facility that provides in-house care for mentally disturbed youths.
5. Student’s mother contacted the district to inquire about special education services that may be available to student since student’s parents live within district boundaries.
On February 17, 2005, the district sent its school psychologist to Utah to conduct a psycho educational assessment of student. Upon completion of the assessment the district concluded that student was eligible for special education under the category of emotional disturbance (ED), but did not qualify as a student with a specific learning disability (SLD).
6. On March 18, 2005 an Individualized Education Program (IEP) team was convened to discuss student’s needs. As a result of the meeting, the district offered to place student at the district’s Yucaipa High School in a Special Class for ED students. Student’s mother disagreed with the placement and requested an AB2726 residential placement1. The district informed mother that DBH needed to conduct an assessment before an AB2726 placement could be offered. Student’s mother signed an authorization form allowing release of information to DBH and the district referred the matter to DBH.
7. DBH conducted an assessment of student, as requested.
8. On June 6, 2005, the IEP team again met to discuss student’s situation. The IEP team agreed that “residential care under AB2726 is appropriate at this time.” (Petitioner’s Exhibit 2.) Student’s mother was adamant in her assertion that student’s current placement at Youth Care is an appropriate placement for student. DBH was receptive to mother’s request; however, DBH needed proof that Youth Care is a nonprofit entity. This request was based on 1This refers to a mental health services placement. 3
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Page 4
DBH’s belief, as will be discussed in the Legal Conclusions section of this decision, that DBH was statutorily prohibited from funding placements in out-of-state “for profit” entities. As stated in student’s June 6, 2005 IEP, “[DBH] has made [student] eligible for AB2726 as of this date 6/6/05. Once Youth Care provides information to DBH regarding funding for placement and their non-profit status, DBH will make it effective today.” (Petitioner’s Exhibit 2.) The IEP also states: “The District offer of FAPE for educational placement for the 30 days interimuntil the next IEP meeting is the NPS placement.” (Petitioner’s Exhibit 2.) Due to the uncertainty of Youth Care’s profit/non-profit status, other placement options were discussed at the IEP meeting. The following alternative placements were suggested: Provo Canyon :scared: , a Utah placement; Cinnamon Hills :scared:, a Utah placement; and an in-state, California placement.
[Question- Are Provo and Cinnamon "Non-profit"? How many Ca kids are placed in programs in violation of this statute?]
Student’s mother refused to consider any of the suggestions. Instead, student’s mother insisted that student remain in her current placement at Youth Care
.
9. On June 27, 2005, a “follow-up” IEP team meeting was held. Again, Youth Care’s profit/non-profit status was discussed. In fact, Youth Care’s profit/non-profit status was the key discussion. All parties agreed that Youth Care was an appropriate placement for student unless its profit/non-profit status precluded funding. Consequently, DBH again requested documentation of Youth Care’s profit/non-profit status.
10. Ultimately, it was established that Youth Care is a “for-profit” entity that provides direct services to student. Youth Care has a business relationship with Aspen Solutions, Inc. (Aspen Solutions), a non-profit, California corporation. Youth Care and Aspen Solutions are associated through a “Management Agreement,” dated January 1, 2003. That agreement reflects that Aspen Solutions “is engaged in the business of providing certain management and administrative services to providers of health care services.” (Petitioner’s Exhibit 3.). Youth Care is such a “provider of health care services” and Aspen Solutions has contracted with Youth Care to: provide administrative coordination and support to Youth Care; establish bookkeeping and accounting systems for Youth Care, including preparation, distribution and recordation of all bills and statements for services rendered by Youth Care; and prepare cost reports.
[Sound like WWASP??]
Aspen Solutions is responsible for recruiting, hiring, and compensating its employees, employees who are responsible for performing Aspen Solutions’ previously listed responsibilities. Aspen Solutions has no role in hiring Youth Care employees and Youth Care, not Aspen Solutions, is responsible for the “supervision of all Youth [Care] staff with regards to therapeutic activities…” (Petitioner’s Exhibit 3). Aspen Solutions plays no part in the daily activities at Youth Care.
Aspen Education Group Vice President Ruth Moore’s testimony established that: “the finance department of Youth Care sets rates for services. The management fee charged by Aspen Solutions is a percentage for each facility. The amounts collected can vary although the percentage is standardized across the facilities.” Aspen Solutions plays no role in Youth Care’s rate setting and does not mandate that services billed through Aspen Solutions be provided by Youth Care on a non-profit basis.

11. By letter, dated July 7, 2005, DBH notified mother that DBH can not fund student’s placement at Youth Care because Youth Care is a “for-profit” entity and DBH is prohibited by California Code of Regulations, title 2 (Regulations), section 60100, subdivision
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Page 5
(h) and California Welfare and Institutions Code (Code) section 11460, subdivision (c), subsections (2) and (3), from funding a “for-profit” placement.
12. Other county agencies in California have made AB2726 placements at Youth Care. In fact, there are several agencies that currently have such placements at Youth Care. There was no evidence that Youth Care’s “profit/non-profit” status was ever considered by the California county agencies that currently fund AB2726 placements at Youth Care. In the present instance, when DBH originally requested information concerning Youth Care’s profit/non-profit status, it received documents concerning Aspen Solutions. Those documents reveal that Aspen Solutions is a non-profit corporation.

LEGAL CONCLUSIONS 1. California Government Code sections 7570 through 7588 shifts responsibility for certain services from local education agencies to other state agencies, such as DBH in the present instance, to provide services, such as occupational therapy, physical therapy, nursing services, mental health services, and residential placements. In pertinent part, Regulations section 60100 provides: (h) Residential placements for a pupil with a disability who is seriously emotionally disturbed may be made out of California only when no in-state facility can meet the pupil’s needs and only when the requirements of subsections (d) and (e) have been met. Out-of-state placements shall be made only in residential programs that meet the requirements of Welfare and Institutions Code Sections 11460(c)(2) through (c)(3). For educational purposes, the pupil shall receive services from a privately operated non-medical, non-detention school certified by the California Department of Education. (Emphasis added.) Code section 11460, subdivision (c), subsection (3), provides: State reimbursement for an AFDC-FC rate paid on or after January 1, 1993, shall only be made to a group home organized and operated on a nonprofit basis. (Emphasis added.) As set forth in Findings 4 and 10, Youth Care is an out-of-state group home/residential care facility that operates on a profit basis. It is not operated on a nonprofit basis. Accordingly, DBH and district are prohibited from funding student’s Youth Care placement. Code section 11460(c)(3) states that reimbursements for placements “shall only be made to a group home organized and operated on a nonprofit basis.” The statute uses the mandatory term “shall;” consequently, there is an absolute prohibition against funding Youth Care, a group home organized and operated on a profit basis.
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Page 6
2.Petitioner asserts that based on the business relationship between Youth Care and Aspen Solutions, Youth Care falls within Aspen Solutions’ non-profit status; thereby avoiding the Code’s funding prohibition. Petitioner highlights the fact that similar placements at Youth Care have been, and currently are, funded by other California county agencies; therefore, such placements must be permissible. Petitioner’s assertion lacks merit. As set forth in Finding 5, while it is true that other California county agencies have placed individuals at Youth Care, it seems that the placements were made without a full understanding of Youth Care’s status and its true relationship with Aspen Solutions. DBH discovered, as set forth in Finding 10, that Aspen Solutions and Youth Care are distinct legal entities; Aspen Solutions merely acts as Youth Care’s bookkeeper.
Code section 11460(c)(3) states in pertinent part that agencies, such as DBH and the district, may only make payments to “a group home organized and operated on a nonprofit basis.” Youth Care is the group home/residential facility, not Aspen Solutions. Youth care is the entity providing services to student, not Aspen Solutions. Youth Care’s profit/nonprofit status is what is important, not Aspen Solutions’. Youth Care is “for profit” and cannot magically become “nonprofit” by virtue of its management agreement with Aspen Solutions. Consequently, the determinations that DBH and district are absolutely prohibited from funding student’s current placement, and that petitioner’s “stay put” requests were properly denied are, and were, appropriate.
3. As indicated by Finding 4, mother unilaterally elected to place student in the current Youth Care placement. Mother and her advocate knew, as early as June 6, 2005, that DBH was concerned about Youth Care’s profit/nonprofit status and its effect on respondents’ abilities to fund the placement (Finding 8). Nonetheless, mother elected to continue with the placement. By doing so, she assumed the risk that she would not be reimbursed for costs of the placement. Additionally, because DBH and district are statutorily prohibited from funding the Youth Care placement, they are equally prohibited from making any retroactive reimbursements to mother for the placement.
4. Under both state law and the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), students with disabilities have the right to a free appropriate public education (FAPE). (20 U.S.C. § 1400; Educ. Code § 56000.) The term “free appropriate public education” means special education and related services that are available to the student at no cost to the parents, that meet state educational standards, and that conform to the student’s individualized education program (IEP). (20 U.S.C. § 1401(9).) In the present instance, DBH and the district have worked in good faith to develop an appropriate program for student. DBH is ready and willing to fund an appropriate placement. In fact, DBH is ready and willing, but unable, to fund student’s current placement at Youth Care. Consequently, respondents have not denied student a FAPE because there is no current IEP in effect with which to conform, and respondents are diligently pursuing other reasonable alternatives to student’s Youth Care Placement. Student’s mother is encouraged to work with respondents to find an appropriate placement by considering other, viable alternatives.
5. Petitioner asserts that if DBH fails to fund student’s current placement, then the district should fund the placement under the “single line of authority” doctrine. It is unnecessary to discuss the “single line” doctrine because, district, like DBH falls within the
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purview of Regulations section 60100 and Code section 11460. Accordingly, both DBH and district are statutorily barred from funding student’s placement at any out-of-state “for-profit” residential facility.
6. California Education Code section 56507, subdivision (d) requires that the extent to which each party prevailed on each issue heard and decided must be indicated in the hearing decision. In the present case, respondents prevailed on the controlling issue and all sub-issues.

ORDER WHEREFORE, THE FOLLOWING ORDER is hereby made:
1. Student’s petition is denied.
2. The parties shall continue to engage in the IEP process and diligently pursue placement alternatives to Youth Care.
Dated: November 2, 2005
 _____________________________ ROY W. HEWITT
Administrative Law Judge
Special Education Division Office of Administrative Hearings
Note: Pursuant to California Education Code section 56505, subdivision (k), the parties have a right to appeal this Decision to a court of competent jurisdiction within 90 days ofreceipt of this Decision.7

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