New York won't stop funding Mass. shock therapy school
The decision in a state Education Department letter dated Friday means the state won't interrupt the $50 million a year in funding it provides to the Judge Rotenberg Center in Canton, Mass., until its review is complete. The school cares for about 150 autistic and disabled children from New York.
State Education Department spokesman Tom Dunn said Monday that the state is reviewing the data provided by the school.
He said the school didn't respond to the state's first request for information. The state's order last week to stop using some methods and correct conditions still stand, Dunn said, but the state will now postpone any action on funding until the review is complete.
The school is one of many the state employs to provide intensive services for disabled New Yorkers when there are no open spots for them in New York state facilities. But only Rotenberg uses shock therapy.
In the letter released by the school, state officials wrote that there will be a continuing review of reported injuries to students.
"The department will take no action regarding your agency's eligibility for approval from the commissioner to receive public funds for the education of students with disabilities until our review is completed," according to the state's letter.
The school's attorney, Michael Flammia, said the state's findings weren't confirmed and that the educational and psychological experts sent to investigate the school were biased against shock therapy.
The state Board of Regents was expected to consider action Monday that would prohibit use of automatic shocks -- for getting out of a seat, for example -- and for shocks administered while a student is restrained, said Deputy Commissioner Rebecca Cort. "Skin shocks," however, could continue at Rotenberg pending the state's review, she said.
"The `findings' and `reports' constitute nothing more than uninvestigated claims by team members who intentionally ignored, and refused to consider when offered, the mountain of evidence demonstrating that there is no clear and present danger and that the treatment plans for the New York students are extremely effective and safe," the school's attorney wrote to the state.
Most families that send the children to the school support the limited use of shock therapy, which isn't used in New York state. Parents and students say the shocks, similar to bee stings that last a couple seconds in sessions once a week, have been more effective than medication for students.
The state's review team made an unannounced visit to the school in the spring after complaints and a lawsuit by a parent.
The state told the school last week it must "cease certain interventions that threaten the health and safety of students at the school. Failure to do so would affect its approval to serve New York state students."
The state
team criticized the school's "combined
use of mechanical restraints and
simultaneous application of skin shock"
to some students. In addition, "many
students were observed as they arrived
to and from school wearing leg and wrist
restraints."![]()




