Teen facilities: Young teen crouches in garden bed wearing heavy overcoat and garden gloves prepping soil.

Lawmakers, federal investigators target teen facilities billed as therapeutic but accused of abuse

Separate investigations by the federal Government Accountability Office and Department of Health and Human Services' inspector general that were launched in 2021, are the first inquiries of their kind in more than a dozen years. Those probes target farms, boot camps and similar residential programs whose proprietors claim are therapeutic. Critics call many of those business owners profiteers, operating under the guise of treating teens with mental and/or behavioral disorders and those at-risk for involvement in the juvenile justice system.

Seclusion and Restraint Hearing June 9th

The State Board of Education is holding a Public Hearing on June 9 from 1pm – 2pm to generate public discussion around the proposed Rule 160-5-1-.35 that would limit the practices of restraint and seclusion in public schools. A 2009 report by the National Disability Rights Network stated that 41 percent of states and territories have no laws, policies or guidelines concerning restraint or seclusion use in schools.  Currently, students in Georgia can be restrained or placed into seclusion for any reason. The proposed rule follows the tragic death of 13-year old Jonathan King who hung himself while secluded in a Gainesville, GA school. Concerned citizens, in conjunction with the Georgia Advocacy Office (GAO), Georgia Council on Developmental Disabilities (GCDD), Center for Leadership in Disability at Georgia State University, Institute on Human Development and Disability at the University of Georgia and Parent to Parent of Georgia, are pressing for a tougher revised rule that also addresses accountability and data collection.