Investigation finds physical, mental, and sexual abuse at Oregon’s Mount Bachelor Academy

By: AnaKasparian
Posted: Nov 6, 2009 at 11:46
Category: Life, Recent Topics
Viewed: 498
Comments: 4


An article was published in the Huffington Post by journalist Maia Szalavitz regarding a criminal investigation of an Oregon school for troubled teens. Mount Bachelor Academy is in the center of controversial allegations made by students claiming that the staff used abusive techniques in their “emotional growth” program known as “Lifesteps.”

Oregon’s Department of Human Services released an eye-opening report on Mount Bachelor, claiming that its emotional growth curriculum is “harmful and damaging” and its “methods of emotional, behavioral and mental health intervention and daily interaction with students perpetuate an environment that poses an immediate threat and puts all children at risk of harm.”

The Department of Human Services is holding Executive Director Sharon Bitz accountable for turning a blind eye to the abusive treatment evidenced by the investigation. The Department believes that Bitz either knew about the abusive practices of her agency, or should have known what was happening under her watch. The abuse is said to be “substantially consistent with the experience of all children enrolled in the program.”

Unsurprisingly, Bitz attacked the validity of the report. In an official statement she said, “We vigorously disagree with the state’s findings. This surprising action, following seven months of cooperative work by Mount Bachelor with the state since the allegations surfaced, is not only erroneous but also creates an unnecessary burden of distress and disruption for our students and their families. As a result, we are quickly and aggressively pursuing legal options.”

During the seven-month investigation, officials talked to 65 witnesses including former students, staff members, and an ex-employee whistle blower. The report confirmed eight allegations of abuse involving five students. Some of the allegations made by former MBA students are horrendous to say the least.

One female student, who had been raped prior to attending the MBA, was forced to dress as a French maid and perform lap dances to sexually suggestive songs such as “Milkshake” by Kelis.

Another former male student told officials that at least four girls and one bi-sexual boy were forced to do the same exercise. He said that when the girls performed the dances on him, “The were just crying,” and that the bisexual boy had to give lap dances to both male and female students.

According to Maia Szalavitz’s piece in Time Magazine, a former student by the name of Melissa Maisa experienced similar bizarre abuse:

Maisa attended MBA from 1992-1994. When I spoke to her for Time, she described having been made to do a bizarre and obscene ritual, for which she had to lie on the floor “in the sluttiest way possible” in front of male staff members and students. Through numerous repetitions, she had to put one foot on a guy’s knee and say, “This foot is Christmas.” Then, she’d place the other foot, saying “This foot is New Year’s. Would you like to meet me between the holidays?”

Maisa said she encouraged the state investigator who interviewed her to get into the positions that she had been made to take. “It’s one thing to hear the stories, but another thing entirely to put yourself in that position mentally and physically, to think about being a teenage girl far from friends and family, feeling like no one loves you and then you have to act out no one loving you.”

The investigation also discovered that school staff failed to tell child welfare officials when a student disclosed that she had been raped.

Many couples have sued for a refund of the $76,000 annual tuition they paid to send their troubled kids to MBA. The state has also ordered the school to shut down until its administrators hire new staff and make other disciplinary changes within 90 days. If MBA fails to meet the requirements within that time frame, its license will be revoked.

If an investigation yields such incriminating evidence on a given school, should the campus ever be allowed to re-open? When considering the Executive Director’s nonchalant and dismissive attitude toward the investigation, I would highly recommend that this school lose its license indefinitely. Cases of sexual abuse involving minors should not be taken lightly, and the fact that the state government is giving this school a chance to “redeem” itself is ridiculous.

Also, the staff members who forced these students to participate in sexually suggestive exercises need to face serious consequences. Telling the school to switch things up in 90 days simply is not enough.

What angers me the most is the fact that this school charged parents $76,000 a year to “educate” their kids, and instead of giving the so-called “troubled teens,” and education, staff members treated them as jokes and abused them.


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  1. Thank you so very much for helping to bring this issue to light. When we tried to have the school investigated in 1998, we were unable to gain enough support, but now, thanks to people like you, we are being heard, and believed! If you are an MBA survivor and you need someone to talk to, please contact me on Facebook.

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  2. grip says:

    Sounds like a racket to me. These troubled teen programs are not well supervised. There have been stories of children being killed when participating in training sessions. Thank you for bringing this to my attenion. It seems that people in power will abuse that power unless they are monitored.

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  3. Grant Gaffey says:

    I was a student at mba. I got myself kicked out on purpose because I thought it was hokey. I got kicked out for drinking coffee while reading banned books and also breaking into the snowboard closet to steal back mine and alex nawerockys snowboards to enjoy some of the fun our parents were promised.
    All in all from reading about this investigation, I agree with the psychiatrist who called the process re-traumatization. Incidentally,
    I have sought revenge against my poor parents for having sent me to a place which attempted to purport such hypocritical ‘ideals’ such as the ‘therapudic benefit’ to re-enacting, in a forced way, past life experiences. In truth, we were forced to re-enact society’s judgements upon ourselves which to me seems insane.
    For example, in an effort to shirk the burden these imposters imposed upon myself and my so called friends at mba, my quiet and reserved, obviously frightened compadre and I brought some of the girls up into the lifestep room to engage in some mutual acts of the desecration of their false temple, dubbed, ‘the lifestep room’.
    We did so gloriously. When we came down however, the staff methodically broke the weakest of us first and found out everything we had done up there. As a result of that incident my sexual ‘accomplise’ was forced to wear the proverbial french maid outfit and walk around acting as consciously sluttish as she could muster for some trusted therapudic benefit in treatment of the hideous sin of having had sex with me
    All of the vainglorious gibberish aside it should be noted that ms. bitz was documentably and knowingly in violation of the states codes in that she made sure at the beginning of each ‘lifestep’ that we were sworn to secrecy for reasons that seemed to us to have more to do with patent law instead of their licensing agreements(ooa). Ms. Bitz struck me as a really ‘new agey’, possibly on drugs herself( most likely benzodiazapnes and/or stimulants) and looked and acted like the queen from Alice and Wonderland. Speaking of the queen,… heres what I think happened: these new age sociopaths got together, probably on lsd, recoiling, themselves, from the cacophany of drugs they took (including qualudes) during the seventies , and decided they were going to become “healers”. Man if only I could find enough ketamine to get me through what they did to us…In liu of taking lsd or mushrooms in the right set and setting in which we may have found comfortable and conducive on the outside we were forced into sleep deprivation instead along with these bizarre re-enactments. which is just plainly stupid for anyone who has taken a psychedelic to consider because it actually does the inverse of what they are trying to do which is or was to absolve us from personal judgments associated with our pasts. I would even go so far as to say that they failed to integrate their psychedelic experiences into something we could benefit from due to the inherent narcissistc element to what they were doing. My god!, How would anyone feel if some stranger walked up to them immitating an autistic person, or suggested that maybe they make coitus with uncle sam,…? Signed, Sherrif Hatter
    p.s. its early and I havent slept and yes ketamine does help a person relive, in a healthy way, past traumatic experiences, sometimes…

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  4. Rob says:

    Nearing the end of my 2 year stay and the completion of the emotional program, my, “peer group” was considered to be, “out of agreement” with the schools mandated rules and were sent to work installing railroad ties for borders of the pathways that ran behind the main school building, mud room, kitchen, class rooms and in front of the laundry room. This was done in the dead of winter in freezing temperatures all by hand. Shovels, picks and wheelbarrows were the only supplied tools. The ground was frozen solid and we had to ferry buckets of hot water from the back door of the kitchen to where it was needed to thaw out the ground so the dirt could be removed for the railroad ties. After we completed the task, which took at least 4-5 days from my memory, we were told it was not good enough and that we were to remove all of the ties and redo our work. So we set out removing every last tie and resetting them. This took another couple of days in the freezing weather. This was not a simple exercise in character building or moral fortitude. This was hard labor enforced upon us with the threat of failing the program held over us as motivation. This is but one example of what I consider abuse and mistreatment that took place at MBA on a regular basis.

    I was a student at MBA from 1991-92 and among one of the first “peer groups” to complete and graduate the program. I was in fear for almost the entire time.

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