Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Education Funding Commission Presentation To Subcommittee Number 3 By Residential Treatment Facilities September 2012.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Education Funding Commission Presentation To Subcommittee Number 3 By Residential Treatment Facilities September 2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 Education Funding Commission Presentation To Subcommittee Number 3 By Residential Treatment Facilities September 2012

2 WHO ARE WE? Georgia facilities which provide comprehensive behavioral health services to children and adolescents –Psychiatric Residential Treatment Facilities ("PRTF") –Room Board and Watchful Oversight ("RBWO")

3 WHO ARE WE? (Cont.) In addition to behavioral health services, we provide: –Housing –Educational needs Children receive education in our facilities because they cannot be served in local schools They receive instruction in nationally accredited schools or programs –Social skills and independent living skills

4 LOCATED STATEWIDE There are 20 residential treatment facilities

5 SCHOOL DISTRICTRESIDENTIAL TREATMENT FACILITY 1.Appling County School DistrictAMIKids Baxley Wilderness f/k/a Baxley Wilderness Institute 2. Atlanta Public School DistrictHillside, Inc. (Conant School) 3. Bibb County School District *Twin Cedars Youth Services/Georgia Industrial Children’s Home 4. Bibb County School District The Methodist Home for Children and Youth – Price Educational Center 5. Bibb County School DistrictMacon Behavior Health System 6. Bleckley County School DistrictAMIKids Middle GA(Middle Georgia Wilderness Institute 7. Carroll County School DistrictKidsPeace National Centers of Georgia 8. Chatham County School DistrictCoastal Harbor Treatment Center (UHS of Savannah, LLC) 9. Cobb County School DistrictDevereux Georgia Treatment Network 10. DeKalb County School DistrictUHS of Laurel Heights 11. Douglas County School DistrictYouth Villages Inner Harbor Campus 12. Dublin City SchoolsCommunity Hope Center, INC 13. Fulton County School DistrictGeorgia Baptist Children's Home – AMEC/Palmetto Campus 14. Glynn County School District Morning Star Youth Estate Center – Morningstar Children and Family Services. 15. Marietta City SchoolsNelson Price Treatment Center 16. Marietta City SchoolsGeorge W. Hartmann Center 17. Meriwether County School District Good Shepherd Therapeutic Center 18. Muscogee County School District*Anne Elizabeth Shepherd Home – Twin Cedars Youth Services, INC 19. Polk County School DistrictMurphy-Harpst Children Center, INC 20. Richmond County School District Lighthouse Care Center of Augusta 21. Taylor County School DistrictGeorgia Center for Youth 22. Troup County School District Bradfield Center -Ault Academy – Twin Cedars Youth Services, INC GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION 2011-2012 Approved Residential Facilities Served Under O.C.G.A 20-2-133 *These Residential Treatment Facilities are served as “programs”. Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent September 15, 2011 * Page 1 of 1

6 WHO WE SERVE? Children in state custody –Department of Human Services (Division of Family and Children Services) –Department of Juvenile Justice –Privately placed children Annually, facilities serve –RBWO - –PRTF -

7 AVERAGE LENGTHS OF STAY –Children and adolescents are in PRTF an average of 120 days –RBWO children have an average lengths of stay of ___

8 TYPES OF CHILDREN Children who are neglected, unruly, delinquent or have behavioral health issues Children who have numerous foster care family placements prior to their placement with a facility Varying ages by facility, up to age 21 for some Children with numerous learning issues, generally two grades behind their peers

9 HOW ARE WE CURRENTLY FUNDED? Through "QBE" with money paid to "LEAs" Through a non-quality basic education formula grant, "SB 618 grant" Title I dollars Private donations

10 WHAT ARE THE PROBLEMS? Residential treatment facilities are not funded sufficiently to meet educational instruction costs of children Facilities do not have their own "QBE" weight Children do not always arrive with an "IEP" SB 618 grants are not sufficient to fund a the local share of the total cost of education and can be cut at any time SB 618 grants are not based on actual costs, and formula is not transparent and has changed annually Student counts occur twice per year and do not capture transient nature of students

11 OUR IDEAS FOR SOLUTIONS: Create a new category and appropriate weight in "QBE" to more closely align with these children's needs Address "IEP" requirement so that a determination of a child's need for placement in a residential treatment facility equates to an IEP Sufficiently fund SB 618 "grants" program to cover the full local share of the cost of education *DOE proposed moving facilities to the "SED" program budget category, but programs in this category are not eligible for Title I and the level of funding could remain inadeqaute


Download ppt "Education Funding Commission Presentation To Subcommittee Number 3 By Residential Treatment Facilities September 2012."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google