Search Maine Yellow Pages 
Log In | Register | Help
Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
New York seeks change at Elan School
By KEVIN WACK, Staff Writer Maine Sunday Telegram Sunday, March 25, 2007

POLAND - For years, the state of New York has paid tens of thousands of dollars to send teenagers with behavioral problems to the Elan School, a private boarding school on 33 acres in this rural community.
But after a surprise visit to the school late last year, New York education officials have raised questions about the students' treatment, alleging in a letter to the school and Maine education officials that Elan students are physically restraining their peers and being deprived of sleep, among other allegations.
The school's lawyer says that virtually all of the New York allegations are false. And officials from Maine's Department of Education said after meeting with an Elan official last Monday that they don't believe students are at risk. But the allegations have prompted the state of New York to threaten to withdraw tuition money for taxpayer-funded students unless Elan addresses the concerns.
"In order for the remaining New York students to continue in your program, the Elan School must resolve the health and safety issues within seven business days of receipt of this letter," Daniel H. Johnson, upstate regional coordinator for the New York State Education Department's Office of Vocational and Educational Services for Individuals with Disabilities, wrote in a Jan. 16 letter to the school.
"I think this is a complete sham," Edward MacColl, a lawyer for the school, said in an interview with the Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram.
It's not the first time the Elan School has attracted attention. The co-educational school educates teenagers with emotional, behavioral and substance-abuse problems. It was founded in 1971 by the late Scarborough Downs owner Joseph Ricci, whose widow, Sharon Terry, is listed as the school's executive director.
In 1975, Illinois state officials pulled 11 children out of the Elan program, charging that they had been mistreated. Subsequent investigations by several states cleared Elan of wrongdoing.
At the 2002 murder trial of Michael Skakel, a cousin of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. who attended Elan from 1978-1980, witnesses testified that beatings and public humiliation were parts of life at Elan during those years. A report in 2002 by the state of Maine found no indication that any students were at risk.
It's unclear what prompted New York officials to show up unannounced at Elan on Dec. 12. During the visit, the officials interviewed students whose tuition is being paid by local New York school systems. Those interviews led to the allegations made by the state of New York in Johnson's Jan. 16 letter to the school.
The letter described "students being put on 'removal' for days and weeks" and alleged that "students who reach a 'higher level' make decisions as to consequences for other students' behavior management."
The letter included allegations of "students restraining other students," "sleep deprivation for students assigned to guard the students on 'removal'," and "students 'counseling' other students and using coercive and confrontational language, which includes yelling and swearing."
The letter and a follow-up letter sent to Elan on Feb. 14 contained few additional details about the allegations, and New York officials did not respond to an interview request.
CORRECTIVE PLAN DEMANDED
However, the two letters stated that New York will stop paying the tuition of taxpayer-funded students unless the boarding school implements a corrective action plan.
The proposed plan calls for the Elan School to revise its policies and procedures to ban the use of inappropriate language during counseling sessions and to comply with New York regulations regarding the suspension and removal of students for disciplinary reasons, among other changes.
Jonathan Burman of the New York State Education Department's Office of Communications said in an e-mail to the newspaper that eight New York-funded students have met the requirements for high school graduation, and the state is no longer paying their tuition. The state will cut off funding for two other students if Elan does not implement the corrective action plan, he said.
In his written response to New York's letter, Elan lawyer MacColl said he believes the New York State Education Department has "wrongfully defamed" the school and its staff members.
"None of the cited regulations even remotely purports to prohibit the alleged conduct," MacColl wrote. "And virtually none of the allegations is factually accurate."
Still, the allegations prompted officials from the Maine Department of Education to meet with the Elan School last Monday in Augusta. The department has since finished its inquiry, said department spokesman David Connerty-Marin, and the state has no plans to investigate the treatment of students at the Elan School.
The last time Maine conducted such an investigation was 2002, when a witness at Skakel's murder trial testified that the school disciplined students through boxing fights. The state inspected the school in two announced visits and concluded in its final report that the boxing practice was no longer happening and that there was "no indication of any student being at risk."
Connerty-Marin said the recent inquiry into New York's allegations showed that the Elan School complies with Maine regulations. "And we do not believe that students are at risk for safety or for health," he said.
He added that the Maine Department of Education has not received complaints from Elan parents or students, but said the department would investigate if it did receive such complaints.
TWO VISITS, TWO VIEWS
While New York conducted a surprise inspection, it is the policy of Maine's education department to let schools know when state officials are going to conduct a visit, said Edwin "Buzz" Kastuck, whose responsibilities within the department include school approval.
In an interview, MacColl said he believes New York may be trying to save money by ending tuition payments to the Elan School, which costs around $49,000 a year to attend, according to the school's Web site.
The Jan. 16 letter from New York education officials stands in contrast with an earlier New York report, which followed a visit to the Elan School on Aug. 8-9, 2005.
"The program at Elan is highly structured and places an emphasis on positive peer support, which are key to student success," reads the 2005 report, which was provided to the newspaper by the Elan School.
Frank McDermott, the Elan School's director of education, said the New York officials who visited in 2005 conducted extensive interviews with students, parents and graduates. By contrast, the New York officials who conducted the surprise visit in December stayed for only three hours and never talked to the school's administrators, he said.
McDermott said that the school enrolls students between the ages of 13 and 20, a majority of whom have battled drug or alcohol abuse. The school has about 95 students, mostly from outside Maine. Public school systems pay for about 40 percent of the students enrolled at Elan. Parents pay the tuition for the remainder, McDermott said.
The Elan program involves students working for other students, rising through a series of job levels in the house where they reside, McDermott said.
He acknowledged that Elan students may temporarily restrain other students who have become violent, prior to the arrival of staff members.
Staff members may put plastic zip ties around a violent student's wrists and ankles, which is allowed under Maine regulations, he said.
McDermott also said that students are sometimes required to work as "Night Owl," a job in which they stay awake to make sure other students don't leave. "They aren't deprived of sleep because the next day they go to bed," he said.
Regarding the allegation that Elan students make decisions about their peers' behavior management, McDermott said, "They may make suggestions, they will tell staff what they think about a situation. But all decisions about whatever happens are done by staff."
When McDermott was asked whether students yell at each other in group counseling, he described what he called "confrontational groups," where students have the opportunity to tell peers how they angered them.
"And part of that may be, I may yell at you," McDermott said. "Once the yelling is over in that situation, if it does occur, there's a process in which they sit down and they discuss that. And the two students would have a discussion, along with other students, about what was happening, and what should happen, and how they should handle those things. So it really is a technique to stop kids from getting into altercations."
McDermott defended the Elan School's methods as helpful for many children.
"These kids literally have changed their lives," he said. "When they arrive, they don't know how to turn a mistake around."
Staff researchers Beth Murphy and Susan Butler contributed to this report.
Staff Writer Kevin Wack can be contacted at 791-6365 or at:


Reader comments

Sort by: Oldest first | Newest First

rachel SALZMAN of FORT LEE, NJ
Aug 22, 2008 7:46 AM
when i first got to have human rights again (the day i turned 18 & could leave) i endlessly searched for an explanation or anything about this terrible degrading place, & it blew my mind how the lies that this place was anything but abusive were so easily accepted by the public. at this point in my life, i am definitely a stronger person, & dont get me wrong, you couldnt pay me enough $ to put myself back into that place, where you dont even have the slightest of human rights..but without a doubt, elan was the moment in life that defined me above all others. but it took 4 years or so of post traumatic stress related incidents, mental breakdowns, & a living hell that was almost worse then the actual time spent slowly decaying emotionally in that cursed place, because now there was nothing keeping me imprisoned anymore, away from the outside world, & i'd find myself repeatedly drifting into..uh, elan hazes, such repulsive anger, the constant cycle of starting off strong in an activity (such as school) & a month later feeling zapped & bitter & all around crazy, & then the hours i spent re-reading everything i could (which, mostly, just made me horribly angry & violated-feeling) turned into days where nothing at all mattered anymore..i couldnt move past it. luckily (or really, not so luckily at all..) for me, i was in rather crappy health, & that made me seem..less insane about how i repeatedly failed at everything i started shortly after beginning (where i did OCD style work..) i cant even put into words the way it makes me feel, even now (i had my last mental horror show in february this past year..) to read the news articles. its disgusting. $40,000 dollars a year to effectively have your kid destroyed from the inside out, & then have no other choice other than doing the same thing to their peers. it made me hate myself, i went against everything i thought i believed. before, i would never have believed this could exist in a non3rdWorld country, justice in USA=a lie.report abuse
bevan straut of wqeww, ME
Aug 4, 2008 2:00 AM
Girls Schools these boarding schools are meant for the girls only. Girls could be more focused and aimed according to their physical and mental needs. Girls can take part in sports activities also that enhance their growth both mentally and physically.
http://www.teensprivateschools.com/report abuse
Chuk gotlieb of Canaan, CT
Jun 8, 2008 1:52 AM
That hellhole should have been sued out of existence 30 years ago. Damn right they used Nazi/Barbarian practices. I haven't been able to hold a decent relationship because of the emotional scarring that place did to me. Even the state has to let you go when you turn 18. Guess those laws don't apply there. I try to forget what happened there, but when i think about those people, I go crazy. Think homicidal thoughts. That's no way to live. Feel awful about what happened to me and others at that place.report abuse
CHIEF of TAMPA, FL
Mar 23, 2008 3:11 PM
This school should be shut down. I graduated from there and was the Full Coordinator of the X's and pretty much was a un paid staff member. I went on to college and now run a very successful business. The point I'm getting at is a have the credentials of telling the truth about the school.

-Do they deprive you of sleep? YES

-Do they lie to parents? YES

-Do they scream and spit in your face? YES

-Do they listen in on phone calls? YES

-Do they make kids sit in chairs for up to 28 days facing a wall? YES (I was one of them)

-The education is horrible!! I would sleep in class because I was exhausted. I turned in the same math assignment for an entire semester.

-Do they verbally and mentally abuse students? YES

-Do they let parents view the dorms? NO, because its like a nazi concentration camp. 28 kids in maybe 1300 sq ft...

-Do they physically restrain students? YES

-Did I see them put kids in a ring until they got beaten senseless? YES. The "ref" was Marty.
Feel free to see his profile on the Elan website.
(I always hated you Marty for good reasons)


The school has given me nightmares 6 years to this day after graduating.

I went on every parent visit for Elan 3. I was the most trusted person in my house.

The school is a disaster. Send your kid there for 1 week and then pull him out if you are going to do anything.

The only staff member which I liked no longer works there.

Bottom line is the school is a big fraud. There lawyers keep it open somehow. Everyone knows what good expensive lawyers can do. Look at O.J. Simpson....

After I make my first million I'm going to shut that school down.

Parents and Lawyers feel free to contact me at tampainvestmentfund@gmail.com. I'll be launching a website soon where FACTS can be posted about the school. FACTS just like the ones I stated abovereport abuse

Show all 30 comments

You must be a registered user of MaineToday.com to post a comment. Register or log in.