
Youth near death following 'restraint'--"He did not have the atheltic
ability for the camp"
San Francisco Chronicle, February 18, 1992
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Original title: "Hard Work For Youths At Camp"]
By Rick DelVecchio and Ken Hoover, Chronicle Staff
Writers
California problem kids get few luxuries in desert
Schurz, Nev.
Two dozen of California's toughest juvenile
offenders are on their backs in the gray desert sand, grunting their way
through leg lifts.
A couple of adult supervisors get down in the sand
with the kids in a gesture of camaraderie. The supervisors keep their
walkie-talkies just a short grab away, ready to call for help should
things turn ugly.
This is the Rite of Passage camp, where things do
turn ugly now and then. It is a place on the fringes in more ways than
one--a tiny cluster of shack-like buildings amid sagebrush, dry lakebeds
and salt flats, where l3- to l8-year-old boys are sent by California
probation departments for 90 days of highly regimented athletic training
and schooling.
It is billed as a last chance before incarceration
for chronic runaways and rebels.
Rite of Passage became the focus of an
investigation by Nevada law enforcement when Paul Choy, a l5-year-old
San Francisco boy, was critically injured there February 4. Members of
the staff said that he became violent and that he stopped breathing even
though they followed carefully drawn rules on retraining residents.
Choy remains on life support in a Reno hospital. A
family friend says he has been declared brain dead.
His case has rekindled controversy over the
benefits of so-called wilderness programs for troubled teenagers and
about probation departments that send youngsters to other states,
outside the range of state licensing.
Five to seven times per week, a resident becomes so
violent he must be physically restrained.
The camp houses ll0 residents. Their well-being is
entrusted to the 33 "coaches" who work seven-day shifts and bunk with
the kids in plywood-floored Quonset huts.
There are no weapons. Stern discipline, even a
raised voice, is discouraged, say camp supervisors. And the rules are
clear: If a resident acts threateningly, the coach must step back and
give the youth every chance to find a face-saving way out.
"The last thing we want to see is a student losing
control." said shift supervisor John Motley. "Every time we see them
make a mistake, we given them the right choice to make."
Motley said the students are told to "stop, think,
act, reflect on your actions."
It does not always work so neatly. Five to seven
times per week, a resident becomes so violent he must be physically
restrained, Motley said.
Strict rules govern how this is done. One day last
week, coaches practiced the camp's restraint technique. It looks easy.
One man claps the other under the arms and gently drops him on his back.
Motley said he is satisfied no one at the camp did
anything wrong. To the contrary, he said coaches may have saved Choy's
life by giving the cardiopulmonary resuscitation for a half-hour before
he was evacuated to a hospital by helicopter.
Motley refused to allow students to be interviewed,
saying Nevada authorities insist that no students can talk to the press
until the investigation is cleared up.
During a camp tour, visitors were shown students
moving in parade formation and eating tortillas with beans in the
cafeteria.
Motley said all incidents in which coaches have
physical contact with students are documented and are routinely reviewed
by the state authorities and the Walker river Paiute Tribe, on whose
land the camp is located.
Rite of Passage, a for-profit company, pays the
tribe $7,000 a month, said tribal chairman Anita Collins. Because the
land belongs to the Paiutes, the state has no licensing authority,
although is does investigate reports of neglect or abuse. Collins said a
full-time inspector keeps an eye on the camp. In the past, she said, the
tribal council has demanded that employees with criminal background be
fired.
Motley produced a log showing that about 300
outsiders, mostly from regulatory agencies, visited the camp in the past
year.
He said it has never been cited for serious
violations of either the state's or the tribe's rules.
In the past year-and-a-half, 50 incident reports
have been reviewed by the tribe, the state and the Mineral County
Sheriff;s Department, he said. In February l99l, the tribe complained
that a student had been restrained for too long.[Emphasis added] The
camp answered that the incident involved three separate instances of
restraint and that each instance was brief.
The tribe instructed the camp to make sure coaches
were recertified on passive restraint techniques every month.
On Sunday, Judi Mar, director of San Francisco's
Asian Youth Center, said she received a call from Paul Choy on January
28. He complained that he as depressed at the camp.
According to Mar, Choy said he had been forced to
sit on a wooden platform in the cold for five hours. Choy said it was
punishment for failing to finish a five-mile run and other parts of the
camp's demanding physical regime. [Emphasis added]
Mar, who has known Choy for about two years, said
she opposed sending the 5-foot-4 youth to the Nevada camp. She said he
did not have the athletic ability for the camp, and it was too far away
for his mother to visit. Also, she was concerned that an Asian youth
from San Francisco would feel isolated at the rural desert camp.
|