Claypool targets juvenile site
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Chicago Tribune
By Ofelia Casillas
July 27, 2006
Steele urged to oust leader, senior staff
Cook County Commissioner Forrest Claypool called on incoming
interim Board President Bobbie Steele Wednesday to replace the
Juvenile Temporary Detention Center’s superintendent and
senior staff in an effort to root out the facility’s persistent
problems.
Claypool cited memos from a court-appointed official, reported
in the Tribune, that portrayed continuing problems with hygiene
and safety among nearly 400 juveniles held there, as well as
resistance to court-ordered reforms.
On Wednesday the Tribune obtained the second status report
filed by Brenda Welch, the compliance officer named last month
by a federal judge to implement change at the center.
In that report, Welch asked facility Supt. Jerry Robinson about
his failure to remove employees accused of abuse from direct
contact with children until they could be trained, as county
officials had agreed in court they would do.
“It had simply slipped [Robinson’s] mind,”
Welch reported.
Welch also reported on a visit she made to the facility at
4 a.m. July 11, in which she found staffers responsible for
eight residential units who were asleep and could not find the
counselors responsible for five more.
Welch also put a spotlight on difficulties the center had in
responding to crises, including a boy who appeared to be attempting
suicide, a girl who injured herself and a boy who shattered
glass in his cell. Staff members paged psychologists and therapists,
but those experts responded late, or in some cases not at all,
Welch wrote.
In a letter to other commissioners, Claypool called Wednesday‘s
Tribune report “fresh evidence that the management of
the county’s juvenile detention center is failing the
children.”
“Bring in your own group of committed professionals who
are willing to protect the civil rights of the children detained
at the center,” Claypool told Steele, who will be sworn
in Tuesday to fill the remainder of President John Stroger’s
term.
“After years of inaction by the previous administration,
you have the opportunity to take bold action on behalf of these
kids. Their safety – and healthy futures – may depend
on it.”
Some Cook County commissioners rallied behind Claypool’s
call.
Commissioner Tony Peraica, the Republican candidate for board
president in the November election, called Robinson a fine gentleman
but said the facility needs a “tough disciplinarian.”
Commissioner Mike Quigley, a Claypool ally, agreed.
“Right now all we are doing is having an ever-increasing,
mounting number of people observing the place. They are all
coming back with the same stuff - it’s terrible,”
Quigley said. “I’d love for President Steele to
take the initiative and do something bold here.”
Calls to Steele’s office Wednesday were not returned.
In the meantime, residents at the facility face “dirty
and unsanitary” conditions, said Welch’s July 15
report.
Welch said she observed standing water from window leaks, and
youths drying off their bodies with T-shirts after showering.
Graffiti covered walls and metal ceiling tiles hung loose,
exposing insulation, Welch reported.
Robinson “was unaware that the facility did not launder
residents’ personal undergarments,” Welch wrote
after she spoke to him on July 10. Residents washed their underwear
in their room sinks and toilets, she reported.
When told of sleeping staffers, Robinson said to Welch that
“he had observed the same thing when he came to the facility
one night,” Welch reported.
Welch wrote that she saw “numerous fights and calls for
assistance.” During a July 7 visit, more than 100 students
– out of a facility population of 386 – did not
attend school, she reported.
Also, supervisors did not know how many times a day they were
supposed to count residents, she noted.