Take Action to Protect Youth from Institutional Abuse

Protect Youth from institutional Abuse

Programs that claim to help parents with “troubled teens” have become a multi-million dollar industry in the United States.  The unregulated business of boot camps, wilderness programs, and training academies make promises to parents desperate to help their children, but what parents don’t understand is how dangerous these institutions can be.

“My mom didn’t like it when I came out as a lesbian, so she hired two men to kidnap me in the middle of the night.  They told me I was going to jail.  Unfortunately, I was sent somewhere worse – where I had fewer rights and was isolated from the outside world.”  – Rebecca Lopez, Survivor

Many of the alleged “treatments” for young people at these facilities are actually torture.  They include food and water deprivation, beatings, hard labor, electric shock therapy, denial of medical care, and extended solitary confinement.  It’s hard to believe this is allowed to take place in the United States, but Survivors of Institutional abuse have documented more than 300 deaths of youth at these facilities.

“Aaron’s mother and I will never escape our decision to send our gifted 16-year-old son to his death at NorthStar.  The guilt of our apparent naivete was crippling.  We were conned by their fraudulent claims and will go to our graves regretting our gullibility.” – Bob Bacon, Father

The LA LGBT Center and Survivors of Institutional Abuse have launched a new campaign to once and for all implement a system to regulate these residential treatment programs. What these facilities do to young people would be are against the law.  If parents did these things, they would be investigated by the Department of Child and Family Services.  Unfortunately, these “boot camps” currently exist outside the law.

“When I was 17, two large men woke me up before dawn, tied a belt around my waist and forced me out of my home.  I was taken to a dumping ground – guarded by men with guns – for kids whose families didn’t know how to solve their child’s issue.  In my case, it was the fact that I’m gay.  The program was an endless nightmare of torture, including public beatings and humiliation, hard labor, and sometimes solitary confinement in a windowless cell where we relieved ourselves in a bucket.” – David Wernsman, Survivor

Representative Adam Schiff and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen have introduced HR3060 to regulate these programs in all 50 states.  It will take all of us, however, to move this work forward.  All of us can play an important role in raising awareness of this issue and taking action to support our LGBT Youth, and in fact, all youth that are at risk of being sent to these facilities.

Take Action

Take the first steps now, and join the LA Center and Survivors of Institutional Abuse:

Click here to sign the petition to Congress to Protect Youth from Institutional Abuse.

 

Protect Youth from Institutional Abuse

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

National Youth HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

National Youth HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

National Youth HIV & AIDS Awareness Day is an annual observance that takes place on April 10. The first ever National Youth HIV & AIDS Awareness Day took place on April 10, 2015.

Today’s young people are the first generation who have never known a world without HIV and AIDS. In the United States, one in four new HIV infections is among youth ages 13 to 24. Every month 1,000 young people are infected with HIV and over 76,400 young people are currently living with HIV across the country. While there has been much talk about an AIDS-Free Generation, we know that is not possible without our nation’s youth. Young people and their allies are determined to end this epidemic once and for all and this day is a way to acknowledge the great work young people are already engaging in to do so.

National Youth HIV & AIDS Awareness Day will be celebrated all across the country. There will be events hosted by various organizations and individuals in high schools, colleges, churches, community centers and more! There also will be opportunities for online participation.

Find out more at www.youthaidsday.org

 

 

 

Great American Condom Campaign

Great American Condom Campaign

Applications to become a Great American Condom Campaign Spring Semester SafeSite are now open!

The Great American Condom Campaign is a youth-led grassroots movement to reduce unintended pregnancies and the spread of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections by normalizing condom use on college and university campuses. Students from across the country apply to become SafeSites, individual condom distribution points, and upon selection receive a box of 500 Trojan condoms to distribute to their peers. SafeSites are also tasked with educating their peers about safer sex and advocating on campus and within their community for the sexual and reproductive health and rights of young people.

The Great American Condom Campaign is a program of Advocates for Youth.  In the past academic year, 2,600 SafeSites distributed more than 1,300,000 condoms to students on 1,234 campuses. SafeSites were established in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.

Sound like fun? Apply for the GACC NOW!

We receive more applications than we can accept, so make sure your application stands out! Be clear about how you will distribute condoms and why you want to be part of the GACC. To learn more about the GACC and the awesome work of previous SafeSites, go to the GACC Facebook page.

Applications to be a Fall Semester SafeSite are open through December 31st, 2014. It only takes 10 minutes to fill out an application, so start now!

Do it for your country.