HOUSE MEMORIAL 52
52nd legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - second session, 2016
INTRODUCED BY
Antonio "Moe" Maestas and Stephanie Garcia Richard
A MEMORIAL
EXPRESSING SUPPORT FOR INCREASED AWARENESS OF THE "TROUBLED TEEN" INDUSTRY AND REQUESTING THAT THE NEW MEXICO CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION SUPPORT LEGISLATION TO REFORM RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT AND YOUTH BOOT CAMP PROGRAMS NATIONWIDE.
WHEREAS, residential treatment and youth boot camp programs have existed for several decades as a last resort treatment option for children with behavioral and mental health issues; and
WHEREAS, families turn to these programs when in need of more assistance than traditional inpatient mental health services or therapy programs are able to offer; and
WHEREAS, many residential treatment programs have successfully helped children with severe behavioral problems; and
WHEREAS, the industry consists of facilities that advertise that they can help troubled teens but, in fact, may use methods that include physical and emotional abuse; and
WHEREAS, the "troubled teen" industry is made up of many for-profit, unregulated residential treatment programs that promise to instill discipline, responsibility and personal change in "troubled" youth; and
WHEREAS, some programs employ a widely discredited method of "behavior modification" of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth, also known as gay conversion therapy; and
WHEREAS, some programs do not differentiate between troubled teen and normal teenage behavior; and
WHEREAS, some programs accept adolescents into the teen program; and
WHEREAS, concerns have been raised about the possible violation of the rights of children in some residential treatment programs; and
WHEREAS, a 2008 United States government accountability office report on residential facilities documented widespread reports of abuse and death in a variety of such programs, which abuse included the excessive use of physical restraints, severe methods of intimidation, starvation, neglectful medical practices and physical abuse; and
WHEREAS, the report also documented that thirty-four states had reported more than one thousand five hundred staff members involved in incidents of child abuse or neglect in 2005; and
WHEREAS, in 2006, at least twenty-eight states reported at least one death in a youth residential treatment program; and
WHEREAS, the United States government accountability office also found that untrained staff, lack of adequate nourishment and reckless operating practices have all contributed to deaths of teenagers in these programs; and
WHEREAS, Tierra Blanca ranch, a boot camp for troubled teens in southern New Mexico, came under scrutiny in 2013 when a teen resident died; and
WHEREAS, there are no statistics tracking the outcomes of these programs; and
WHEREAS, in New Mexico, the children, youth and families department provides for licensing of residential treatment centers but does not license short-term facilities such as youth boot camps; and
WHEREAS, concerns have been raised about whether children in some facilities have been prevented from communicating freely with family members or other authorities; and
WHEREAS, there are inadequate safeguards to prevent unnecessary placement of children in these facilities; and
WHEREAS, bipartisan legislation has been introduced in the United States house of representatives to reform residential treatment and youth boot camp programs nationwide; and
WHEREAS, federal legislation could help prevent these abusive boot camps from shutting down in one state and reopening in another under a different name; and
WHEREAS, federal legislation will require states to establish standards that are at least as strict as federal standards; and
WHEREAS, federal legislation will require states to develop policies that ensure that every program is properly licensed and in compliance with license requirements;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO that support be expressed for increased awareness of the troubled teen industry; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the New Mexico congressional delegation be requested to support legislation to reform residential treatment and youth boot camp programs nationwide; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be transmitted to the office of the governor, the office of the attorney general, the secretary of children, youth and families, the administrative office of the courts and each member of the New Mexico congressional delegation.
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