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DSS Social Workers Must Be Accountable
DSS Covers Up Its Own Child Abuse
By Ed Oliver
May 2002
The legislature was told last month by many people that DSS covers
up its own child abuse and that social workers must be punished
when they do so.
Nobody from DSS showed up at the hearing to testify before the
the Criminal Justice Committee.
Nev Moore, Executive Director of the parents rights group, Justice
for Families, told the committee there is "one segment of the
population that has carte blanche to abuse children, and they are
confident under a cloak of protection that is impenetrable. That
is the Department of Social Services and their contracted foster
parents and residentials."
Moore said the bill, H4896, seeks accountability from DSS.
According to Moore, DSS "screens out" and ignores reports
of child abuse that take place in the agency's own foster homes
and roughly 300 contracted residential facilities. She said children
who are taken from their parents and placed into DSS facilities
are often subject to brutal restraint techniques as evidenced by
bruises, rug burns, and hand-marks on their arms and necks.
"Obviously if the parents did this, they'd be in jail,"
said Moore. "My feeling is that DSS employees should refer
abuse complaints about their own foster homes and institutions to
the state police as an independent and external source of investigation."
Moore said she envisions the formation of a specialized task force
that would investigate the abuse and death of children in DSS care.
Support from Visiting Nurses
She submitted as evidence a thick report compiled by her non-profit
organization, as well as a letter in support of the bill written
by an official from the Visiting Nurse Association of Cape Cod.
In the letter, Ann-Marie Peckham, Director of Operations-West,
wrote:
"It has been my unfortunate experience to witness the "screening
out" of some significant 51a's that staff and I have filed
- full well knowing that the complaints were valid, and witnessed
by multiple reliable and credible healthcare workers. Some of the
complaints were also supported by concrete and irrefutable medical
documentation - i.e. lab work.
"Why should a child in a DSS foster home have less constitutional
rights than a child in his or her own family home??? The foster
child, and especially one who has been placed under the guardianship
of the foster parent, is denied the right of access to due process
of a legal nature and an objective investigation overseen by our
law enforcement agency."
Rep. David Linsky spoke up during the hearing to say that even
if DSS ignores a 51A filed against one of the department's people,
a person can go directly to law enforcement. But Rep. Linsky obviously
was not listening to the testimony, because several people already
told the committee that law enforcement simply refers the abuse
charge back to DSS who ignore the complaint.
Moore testified that a state police official once looked for a
regulation on the matter and could not find one. He told her that
the practice of referring an abuse complaint against a DSS foster
home or facility back to DSS must have just "evolved."
Parents Testify
One parent who testified, Heidi Palanza, said she called the police
more than once to report DSS facilities that physically harmed her
young daughter. Her daughter suffered a head injury and restraints
and finger marks from a man's vice-like grip that bruised her daughter's
arm. The abuse reports from those incidents were screened out by
DSS and not acted upon by police.
Among those who testified was an upset Springfield father, who
said that his daughter was gang raped in DSS custody, and they did
nothing. "I want to say to you, and you can listen to me or
you can throw what I have to say out the door, because everybody
else has. For every one of us that are here, there's at least ten
thousand silent people out there in the community, and there is
a revolution brewing!"
Rep. Tobin Annoyed at Parents
The committee chairman, Rep. Stephen Tobin, was visibly annoyed
at the father's emotional testimony and lectured him. "Bear
in mind that I understand that there are an awful lot of issues
and baggage that you bring into this hearing room. You should understand
that we don't want to sit here and be your psychologist. If you
feel better venting, trust me, you are not helping your cause."
The Springfield man answered that he only wanted DSS to be held
accountable.
Rep. Tobin was absent during most of the testimony in support of
the bill and had even scheduled the DSS bill to be heard at the
end of the day after all other bills were heard and the room was
virtually empty.
Committeewoman Rep. Anne Paulsen spoke up to say she had already
heard a lot of testimony about problems with DSS on another committee,
and they should be very careful about giving criminal liability
to a DSS employee who screens out a 51A report. She said she does
not think the problems at DSS can be solved with legislation.
Paulsen said almost all social workers at DSS are "very well
intentioned, work very, very hard. They also have a large number
of cases they are dealing with." She said she is certainly
willing to talk to the DSS Commissioner about problems she has heard
about on the Health and Human Services Committee, but does not think
legislation is the answer.
Tobin leaped on that statement and added that most of the problems
seem to be with policy and procedure, and the only reason this bill
is before the committee is because it is asking for criminal penalties.
Tobin told Paulsen she could take the lead on this issue for the
committee with her Human Services experience.
Tobin Interested in TV Lights
In contrast to his lack of interest in child abuse committed by
DSS employees, Tobin displayed a deep concern and interest in Senator
Marian Walsh's child abuse bill, S 2266. He put her on at the beginning
of the hearing when all the television cameras and reporters were
present because of the interest in the Catholic priest pedophile
scandal. He even said they would go to executive session later to
move on it because it was so urgent.
Walsh's bill seeks to criminalize any employer who remains silent
if he knows or should know about an employee who sexually abuses,
assaults, kidnaps or stalks a child. The law would also apply to
supervisors of volunteers, such as a librarian or a manager at a
non-profit, according to Walsh.
Although interest in the law is fueled by the priest scandal, DSS
and its contractors may end up having the law applied to them also,
if certain provisions are not gutted from the bill.
Walsh's bill includes in the definition of employer, "
The
Commonwealth, its political subdivisions, authorities, boards departments
and commissions thereof, and shall include any person acting in
the interest of an employer, directly or indirectly."
MassNews asked Sen. Walsh if her proposed law would indeed apply
to DSS, which is sacrosanct.
"Every setting," answered Walsh.
A drawback to Walsh's bill, however, could be where it targets
an employer who "should know" about the abusive activities
of an employee. Already, feminists from Jane Doe Inc., eager to
expand the war on domestic violence, were testifying approvingly
about the proposed law and how organizations such as theirs can
help employers "predict" employees' future violence.
It is the use by social workers of such "predictions"
of possible future abuse, say family advocates, that has led to
the wholesale destruction of children and families by state agencies.
By employing a checklist of arbitrary and judgmental "risk
factors," extremist, feminist social workers at DSS justify
snatching children from their parents to allegedly prevent abuse.
They use similar psychobabble, say critics, to brand all men as
batterers, in order to separate them from their children in divorce
and custody battles.
The state ignores, however, say DSS critics such as Nev Moore,
the extreme trauma a child endures when he is snatched from his
parents' arms at gunpoint and placed in a succession of abusive
DSS approved foster homes or DSS facilities that drug and beat the
child.
Mental Health Worker In Favor
Christopher Garrison, director of the "Massachusetts Commission
on Human Rights," a group that works to clean up the field
of mental health from human rights abuses, also testified in favor
of Nev Moore's bill.
Garrison said he operates an abuse hotline and gets many complaints
and affidavits from parents about DSS. "It seems like in many
cases the treatment given by DSS is more abusive to the children
being taken care of than any kind of treatment they would receive
in their homes." Garrison submitted an affidavit from a Fitchburg
parent who witnessed two young boys at a DSS contracted residential
center slammed facedown to the floor, screaming, with adults on
their backs twisting their arms.
The name of the facility was Hillcrest Educational Center, of Lenox,
MA.
According to Garrison's report about one boy, "While on the
ground, the parent witnessed the Hillcrest employee on top of this
boy about 9-years-old yelling, 'So you don't like grilled cheese,
so you don't like grilled cheese.' The boy was crying out that he
couldn't breathe which is not dissimilar to the way hundreds of
deaths through restraints to children have occurred throughout the
U.S."
A DSS worker also witnessed the assault, according to the affidavit,
but the incident was not reported to the police.
According to Garrison, per a Dept. of Education review, Hillcrest
performed 7,700 incidents of restraints from September 1999 to October
2000 - an average of 592 per month. And that is only one DSS facility.
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