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Sonoma County PACEs Connection (CA)

Valley Forum: The necessity of change at Hanna Boys Center [The Sonoma Index Tribune]

 

By Brian Farragher, Aug 15, 2019, Special To The Index Tribune

For almost 75 years Hanna Boys Center has been instrumental in turning around the lives of thousands of troubled, at-risk boys and helped them become productive citizens. We are proud of this heritage.

But like many organizations — religious, educational, political and corporate — Hanna has had missteps and failures which have come to light. You’ve probably read about them. These incidents of sexual abuse over several years are painful, harmful and unacceptable. It appears management and staff at the highest level betrayed their positions of trust and harmed some of our boys, or failed to protect them, leading to both physical and psychological injury. That’s why we’re initiating change – top to bottom. Major problems demand major changes, and we are rising to the challenge with a new strategic plan and direction.

A better, more effective Hanna is in the works.

In the months ahead we will dig further into the issue of past abuse and proactively reach out to alumni and former staff to uncover any additional boys who were hurt or abused while in our care and make appropriate amends. This can never happen undetected again, and we’ve taken important steps to ensure the safety and wellbeing of our boys.

When I was hired five years ago, it was to implement a newer and proven treatment model known as Trauma Informed Care. It rejects the old model of reward and punishment with its endless number of rules and restrictions. Instead, it focuses on the many traumas inflicted on the boys, recognizing that they will not be helped simply by structure and discipline alone. While we have not abandoned structure and accountability, we now focus on building relationships and collaboration to make a lasting change. This is a long game which takes patience, compassion and tireless effort.

We are asking for more training and more accountability from our teachers and staff, and not every staff member is equipped or interested in complying with this ask. Frankly, it is more intense and demands much harder effort than the old methods. As a result, there is some staff turnover, as there would be in any organization which is moving forward. In the old Hanna model boys who didn’t follow rules to the letter were ultimately expelled. We see our current mission to help all the boys in our care, no matter how taxing, time consuming and sometimes frustrating this is.

The science on Trauma Informed Care (TIC) is irrefutable. This is not simply a Hanna method. The landmark Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Kaiser prompted adoption of TIC by physicians, therapists, educators and counselors nationally. It is recognized by the State of California as the proper treatment for at-risk youth.

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