SCHOOLS FOR
TROUBLED SPRING UP AROUND U.S.
Copyright (c) 1996, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Monday, April 1
By Susan C. Thomson Of The Post-Dispatch Staff
SCHOOLS FOR
TROUBLED SPRING UP AROUND U.S.
THEY VARY FROM
'LIFESAVERS' TO 'DISMAL FAILURES'
Private residential schools for troubled youths - schools like
Mountain Park Baptist Academy near Piedmont, Mo. - are springing up all around
the country, faster than observers can keep track of them.
"There are hundreds and hundreds of these schools, most of
which have been created in the last five years," said Mark Sklarow,
director of Independent Educational Consultants in Fairfax, Va.
Sklarow's is an association of 215 people around the country who
help parents find private schools for their children, sometimes schools for children
they can't control.
He said that he had never heard of Mountain Park, where
16-year-old William Andrew Futrelle II of Boca Raton, Fla., was beaten and
slashed to death last week. A Highway Patrol investigator said ‘Futrelle had
been killed by three students who feared that Futrelle wouldn't go along with
their plans to take over the academy and get on network television’. Anthony G.
Rutherford, 18, of Siloam Springs, Ark., has been charged with first-degree
murder and armed criminal action. Two 15-year-olds from California may face
similar charges.
Most schools like Mountain Park are operated for profit, with
tuitions as high as $40,000 a year, Sklarow said. Many hire recruiters who
travel around the country promoting the school to doctors, therapists and
counselors, he said.
In quality, the schools "range from being lifesavers, with
fantastic records of success, to being absolute dismal programs," Sklarow
said. And there is no national system for registering them - no central source
where parents can get and compare information about them.
"The scary thing to me as a parent - as well as someone who
is involved in helping place children in educational settings - is we're
talking about the most vulnerable kids, the kids who are the most
troubled," he said. "Parents are placing them in a blind way. They
don't know what these programs are."
Officials at Mountain Park, which has always kept its distance
from its community, have made no public comment on the case. The school charges
$750 a month and requires a minimum stay of a year.
Will Futrelle had been there only a few weeks when he was killed.
In early
January he was arrested in Boca Raton on charges of careless
driving and leaving the scene of an accident.
Billie Futrelle. Will's mother hired Jack Goldberger, a lawyer in
West Palm Beach, Fla., to represent her son.
"When Mrs. Futrelle came in to see me about her son's minor
criminal problem, she indicated she was going to place him in the school in
Missouri, that it was religious in nature and that it had come highly recommended
to her," Goldberger said.
He said he didn't know who had done the recommending. The
Futrelles could not be reached for comment.
Roz Lowenhaupt, who directs the Independent School Placement
Service in Clayton, first heard of Mountain Park Baptist Academy when it hit
the news last week. Once in a while, she said, she works with a family looking
for a place for a troubled child.
Such places are increasing in numbers, she said, because
"there's an increase in the number of behavior problems with teenagers. .
. . Parents are desperate."
Josey Staples, director of Shelterwood in Branson, Mo., agreed.
"Kids are in crisis right now," he said. "Well-meaning folk are
trying to respond to that, the kids spiraling out of control. Somewhere we have
to create an environment where we can help kids regroup."
Also fueling the demand for youth homes are new limits on
insurance for hospitalization, he added.
Staples described Shelterwood as an interdenominational Christian
home for 20 children, ages 12 to 18, from all over the country. It costs $70 a
day - $25,550 a year, he said.
Staples was vaguely familiar with Mountain Park, having known a
family that considered it for a child. The family chose Shelterwood because it
was not so "highly supervised," he said.
Mountain Park has a school on the premises. Shelterwood sends its
residents to public school. Another difference is that Shelterwood rarely
accepts students who have had brushes with the law. Staples said.
He speculated that Mountain Park had grown - from 30 students when
it started nine years ago to about 200 now - because it has been willing to
take some of the most difficult youngsters.
"My heart goes out to them because it's a difficult population
to work with," Staples said.
"We know those kinds of places are dedicated to what they're
doing. No matter how high you make the fences and how many people you have
watching the kids, things are going to happen."
ADVICE FOR
PARENTS
Professionals in
the field advise any parent considering a private residential treatment center
for a child to:
* Start by having the
child evaluated by a professional, such as a psychiatrist.
* Ask physicians, social
workers and educators to recommend treatment centers.
*Visit any center you
are seriously considering.
* Ask detailed questions about costs, the
amount and type of therapy, arrangements for children's schooling and
qualifications of the staff.
* Insist on references
from parents of children who have completed the program.