A new approach being championed by the state of Wisconsin is being blamed by a union official for breakdowns in security at Wisconsin’s two juvenile prisons that are now the targets of criminal and civil rights investigations.

Beginning in 2012, staff at the Lincoln Hills School for Boys and Copper Lake School for girls were trained in and began using trauma-informed care principles. A 2014 report by the Division of Juvenile Corrections summarizing use of the approach credits it with a sharp reduction in disciplinary referrals.

Department of Corrections spokesman Tristan Cook said trauma-informed care now is the “standard approach” to juvenile corrections in several states, including Wisconsin.

Troy Bauch, a union official who represents workers at the two facilities, emphasized he is not opposed to trauma-informed care, just the way it has been implemented at Lincoln Hills.

Union representative Troy Bauch says officials at Lincoln Hills School for Boys "gave the keys away to the kids" when they implemented trauma-informed care at the northern Wisconsin juvenile prison. (Courtesy of AFSCME Council 32)
Union representative Troy Bauch says officials at Lincoln Hills School for Boys “gave the keys away to the kids” when they implemented trauma-informed care at the northern Wisconsin juvenile prison.
(Courtesy of AFSCME Council 32)

He said the new approach led to the alleged abuse now under investigation. And, Bauch said, it has led to offender-on-staff attacks.

The allegations under investigation — that offenders have been attacked and sexually abused by staff and other offenders — prompted the resignation of DOC Secretary Ed Wall and the departure of staff and top management at the two prisons. The facilities also have been plagued by suicide attempts in recent months.

“The facility gave the keys away to the kids,” said Bauch of the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees Council 32. “There came a time where they (DOC) stopped holding youth accountable for their behavior. That led to assaults on staff and other youth.”

“I think it’s not fair to blame the trauma-informed care approach,” responded Joanne Juhnke, policy director at Wisconsin Family Ties, a Madison-based mental health advocacy group that helped train staff at the two facilities in Irma. “The trauma-informed care approach … is the opposite of the allegations of abuse. Trauma-informed care is all about safety.”

Cook agreed, saying the department has no plans to abandon trauma-informed care.

“It would be inaccurate to suggest that trauma-informed care was responsible for a breakdown in security and order, as trauma-informed care is a philosophical approach that takes into account prior trauma or abuse and teaches youth to avoid harmful or destructive behavior,” Cook said.

Fewer restraints used

The 2014 report recounted several security and other changes made to avoid traumatizing or retraumatizing the young people held there. The majority of the offenders had experienced at least three “adverse childhood experiences,” including physical or sexual abuse or severe and persistent neglect, the report said.

The changes included eliminating the use of leg shackles, with limited exceptions related to “aggression containment.” The facilities also stopped placing restraints on young offenders for out-of-building appointments such as doctor or dentist visits if they were not in “restraint status” while in the institutions because of escape risk. According to Bauch, workers also were told they could not summon security personnel to classrooms except for assaults or other serious incidents.

The report compared two living units at Lincoln Hills — one that incorporated trauma-informed care in juvenile offenders’ daily lives and another that did not.

Scott Webb is the trauma-informed care coordinator for the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Webb says he does not know what role trauma-informed care played in the allegations of abuse under investigation at Lincoln Hills School for Boys. However, Webb said the approach is aimed at preventing violence. Photographed on April 22, 2016, in Madison, Wis. (Coburn Dukehart / Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism)
Scott Webb is the trauma-informed care coordinator for the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Webb says he does not know what role trauma-informed care played in the allegations of abuse under investigation at Lincoln Hills School for Boys. However, Webb said the approach is aimed at preventing violence. Photographed on April 22, 2016, in Madison, Wis.
(Coburn Dukehart / Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism)

Among the strategies used in the trauma-informed unit was creation of a “calm room” that was used an average of 266 times per month, and policies that led to fewer room confinements and other disciplinary actions. Walls were repainted with more relaxing colors and window screens that had created a “cage-like atmosphere” were removed. The number of major disciplinary infractions in the trauma-informed unit was cut in half, the report found.

But the report said some employees doubted the approach and had trouble using trauma-informed care in their interactions with the offenders.

Bauch countered that he believes the more relaxed atmosphere led to offender-on-offender assaults and attacks on staff, including one employee whom he said suffered a traumatic brain injury.

“The reason kids are at Lincoln Hills is they’ve been through everything else the state of Wisconsin has to offer, and they’ve failed … in less-restrictive environments,” Bauch said.
“Trauma-informed care — when they brought that in, they saw the beginning of the end of a safe facility.”

Supporters tout approach

Scott Webb, coordinator of trauma-informed care for the state Department of Health Services, said he does not know what happened at Lincoln Hills and Copper Lake. He said trauma-informed care, when used correctly, should reduce — not exacerbate — violence.

“These young people, most likely, come from very traumatic backgrounds, and perhaps it’s never really been identified, it’s never really been talked about,” Webb said. “These young people may not have ever made the connection between their behavior and where maybe they have come from. And trauma-informed care doesn’t excuse behavior, but it may explain a lot of it.”

Tamra Oman advocates the use of trauma-informed care. Oman helped train staff in the approach at Lincoln Hills School for Boys and Copper Lake School for girls. She says trauma-informed care works only when everyone feels safe Ñ staff and offenders alike. Oman was photographed on April 22, 2016, outside the East Madison Community Center in Madison, Wis. (Coburn Dukehart / Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism)
Tamra Oman advocates the use of trauma-informed care. Oman helped train staff in the approach at Lincoln Hills School for Boys and Copper Lake School for girls. She says trauma-informed care works only when everyone feels safe Ñ staff and offenders alike. Oman was photographed on April 22, 2016, outside the East Madison Community Center in Madison, Wis.
(Coburn Dukehart / Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism)

Tamra Oman, an advocate who helped train the Lincoln Hills and Copper Lake staff, said trauma-informed care only works when everyone, both staff and offenders, feels safe.

“That literally is the number one thing with trauma-informed care: Safety, transparency and honesty,” said Oman, who was physically and sexually abused as a child. “We have to get it stable and safe, whatever that looks like, wherever you are.

“If we continue to re-trigger and hurt people,” Oman added, “no one is going to win.”