Home > Uncategorized > State Commission vilifies institutions for people with developmental disabilities and demands an apology from the governor

State Commission vilifies institutions for people with developmental disabilities and demands an apology from the governor

A state commission established in 2023 to study the history of institutions for the developmentally disabled and mentally ill in Massachusetts has issued a final report which, as expected, almost completely vilifies those facilities.

The report by the Massachusetts Special Commission on State Institutions, which is dated May 25, paints an overwhelmingly negative and untrue picture of the history of the institutions, often couched in extreme terms. The report only briefly mentions the dramatic improvements in those centers for the developmentally disabled that occurred starting in the 1970s.

We repeatedly predicted that the Commission would examine only the history of the institutions prior to the 1980s when those facilities were notorious for abuse, neglect and poor conditions.

Our concern has been, and now remains, that opponents of the Wrentham and Hogan Intermediate Care Facilities (ICFs), the state’s two remaining congregate care centers for people with developmental disabilities, will use the report as justification for pushing for the closure of the facilities.

Notably, the report demands a formal apology from the governor, who, it claims, “must acknowledge the enormity of the legacy and harm of mass institutionalization that reverberates today.”

But what about the improvements that were made in institutional care starting in the 1970s in Massachusetts under the landmark Ricci v. Okin class action lawsuit? The late U.S. District Court Judge Joseph L. Tauro, who oversaw the consent decree in that case, said in 1993 that the care in the institutions was by then “second to none anywhere in the world.”

Isn’t that improvement also part of the legacy of institutionalization in Massachusetts? Should Governor Healey apologize for that?

What about the high federal standards that Wrentham and Hogan meet today? And what about the families that are fighting to keep Wrentham and Hogan open as the state pursues a policy of letting Wrentham and Hogan die by attrition?

Also, what about the legacy of deinstitutionalization, which the report does not criticize, but which has also caused much harm?

While the report has tried to make a positive contribution in calling for making public the historical records of the care of residents of institutions in Massachusetts, the report appears to assume that those records contain only damning accounts of that care. That is, of course, not true; but, the report implies that the purpose of providing public access to the records is to reveal “atrocities” committed in the institutions.  As the report states:

By hiding a story of mass human rights abuses, the Commonwealth is preventing society from engaging in a full reckoning with the atrocities that have been inflicted on disabled people throughout our history.

Sensational claims concerning closed facilities

The report also makes a number of sensational claims that lack evidence of what it alleges are shocking activities that have taken place on the campuses of closed facilities. Among those allegations, for which the report doesn’t provide any details, are that some unidentified campuses have been used for pornographic photo shoots and “white supremacist celebrations.”

As the report puts it:

At their most offensive, (former institutional) sites have been used for pornographic photo shoots, white supremacist celebrations, community festivals, and amusement parks that would never be tolerated at similar sites of significant human rights abuses in Massachusetts or America.

I have not been able to find any references on line to pornographic photo shoots on the campuses of closed institutions. As noted, the Commission report provided no examples of it.

Brandeis University’s student newspaper, The Justice, reported that graffiti featuring markings of Neo-Nazi groups has been discovered on the walls of one of the buildings on the campus of the former Fernald Developmental Center. But the Waltham Police Department stated that “there are no known organized hate groups operating in the area.”

So, while vandalism at the former Fernald Center has been an ongoing issue, there is no information I could find that refers to white supremacist celebrations being held there. The Commission also provided no examples of amusement parks on the campuses of former institutions.

The amusement park reference might be to the development by the City of Waltham of a portion of the Fernald campus as a memorial park and “universally accessible” playground, with an electric train, a mini golf course, and a spray park “that would make it the largest disability-accessible park in New England.” The park received two awards from the Massachusetts Recreation and Parks Association in February for its design and commercial partnership.

In addition, the Commission report includes what appears to be a false claim that there is a threat of a “revival of large-scale institutionalizations” in Massachusetts. It provides no evidence for the claim.

While the report doesn’t appear to specifically recommend the closure Wrentham or Hogan, it claims institutionalization “stubbornly remains.” The statement appears to be an indirect call for the closure of facilities such as Wrentham and Hogan. If the report is referring only to institutions for the mentally ill as stubbornly remaining, it doesn’t specify that distinction.

The report’s full statement on this issue is:

Precisely because the public is largely unaware of the countless tragedies inflicted by these institutions—tragedies told in this hidden history—people with disabilities today face very-real threats by the non-disabled including the revival of large-scale institutionalizations where the practice has been abolished, and its expansion where it stubbornly remains.

Rights abuses were not ‘overlooked’

In its coverage of the Commission’s report, GBH News, a Boston-based National Public Radio affiliate and one of the more fervent critics of the former Fernald Center, quoted Alex Green, vice-chair of the Commission and one of the chief proponents of the Commission’s creation. According to GBH News, Green stated:

I think that there’s a massive ongoing act of erasure happening about one of the most significant and overlooked human rights tragedies in the history of this state and the country. It [the report] really gives us a devastatingly personal sense of how the state turned the idea of care into a much darker thing that harmed a lot of people.”

But the Ricci class action case and Judge Tauro’s involvement clearly show that those human rights abuses were not overlooked. They were addressed and corrected.

Moreover, even with regard to the early history of institutional care in Massachusetts, the Commission’s report appears to be uniformly negative when, in reality, not everything was necessarily bad about those early years.

As Ingrid Grenon noted in her book, “From One Century to the Next: A history of Wrentham State School and the Institutional Model in Massachusetts,” the 1920s was a period when the then Wrentham State School, under the direction of its first superintendent, George Wallace, had a caring staff and administration, and offered a multitude of services and activities for the residents.

Grenon’s book points out that Wrentham, like other similar institutions that sprang up in this state and around the country, entered a long decline, starting in the 1930s as it became more and more overcrowded and understaffed. The state schools in Massachusetts were finally brought back to excellence as a result of the Ricci v. Okin class action litigation.

But the Special Commission has this to say about those early years of institutional care in Massachusetts:

…Massachusetts developed, sustained, and exported many of the first legal, medical, educational, charitable, and social systems for placing people with intellectual, developmental, and mental health disabilities in institutions: practices widely understood for more than 75 years to be a violation of fundamental human rights. (my emphasis)

In sum, we would again emphasize that the report appears to have made some positive contributions with regard to the need for public access to records and for the identification of unmarked graves on the sites of the former institutions in Massachusetts.

But it is unfortunate that the report repeatedly leaps from those issues to unwarranted condemnations of the role and history of institutional care in the state. It’s clear from the report that the Commission did not closely examine the full history.

As we’ve previously noted, Green and other proponents of the Commission made statements prior to serving on the Commission that were almost uniformly negative about care at the former Fernald Center, in particular.

That negative agenda appears to have muddied the positive contribution that the report has tried to make with regard to the role of institutional care in Massachusetts.

  1. Unknown's avatar
    Anonymous
    June 6, 2025 at 9:41 am

    The purpose of the commission on institutions is that the state wants to sell land to put up houses. They want all care to be home and community which is littered with abuse, neglect and exploitation. Alex Greens affiliation and appointment was from the ‘non-profit’ that heavily benefits financially from closing all in patient services in the state. 

    That was the sole purpose of the report and commission that created it. Yet again everyone pads their wallets and those who are defenseless suffer. 

    Massachusetts has not apologized for the abuse and neglect prior to the courts stepping in, because they changed the location of where the abuse happens due to institutions being regulated. It’s not really history if they cleaned up one spot, and do the same in another. As a nation, and a state, the abuse and neglect of the disabled was spotlighted in the 70s from Ricci and other cases. But the unlucky individuals who were moved to non regulated areas that are still being abused, neglected and exploited still need help today. The state took their past experience, and instead of cleaning up the mess so it never happened again, they moved individuals to unregulated HCBS and put a system in place that covers up the abuse. 

    Make no mistake, that report has nothing to do with institutions, or the history of human rights violations. It has to do with the state wanting to sell the land to developers. Wrentham and Hogan are not the only places in jeopardy for greed. You can include Pappas Rehabilitation, and other facilities for mental health and the elderly. 

    Liked by 2 people

    • Unknown's avatar
      Anonymous
      June 6, 2025 at 1:29 pm

      I just wrote a long reply to your message and it was erased, so I’ll make this short! I just wanted to say, these are my words exactly!! I am s 100% in agreement about them wanting to sell the land to greedy land developers!! It’s all about greed and not human rights!!!

      There is no way I would ever place my 76 yr old brother in a state run group home where abuse, rape and neglect, are rampant!! I want him to live out his years at the Marion Moore Bldg, where he is safe from harm. It’s his home! Granted, none of the institutions were stellar before Judge Tauro, but, God bless that man, He changed the whole system with his rulings!! The institutions have come a long way since the mid 70’s, and WE, the family members should know!! We know you operate out of greed and potential monetary gain…DEEP POCKETS!! NOT out of concern for this vulnerable population! Don’t try to sell us on state hospitals and group homes as being the answer for our loved ones because of human rights!! HA We, more than anyone, know the benefits these institutions provide. They’ve improved way beyond anything since the 70’s. and we should know!

      This format keeps erasing my message and I have to start over!! Please fix it!

      Liked by 1 person

    • Mina Murray's avatar
      Mina Murray
      June 6, 2025 at 2:17 pm

      My son is in a community based group home. His exposure to the community is a van ride. No day hab. Just daily visits to the kitchen and bathroom. Abuse is only caught by me based on the marks on his body. Let’s stop pretending community-based group homes are a walk in the park for those with severe IDD. I will continue to fight for his right to an ICF. Employees are treated with fairness and dignity.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Unknown's avatar
    Anonymous
    June 6, 2025 at 9:55 am

    Why isn’t COFAR mentioning the fact that it had four seats on the Commission that it wanted? Is COFAR disagreeing with its own appointees?

    Liked by 1 person

    • June 6, 2025 at 12:46 pm

      What seats are you referring to? The final legislation, which was in the form of budget language, didn’t offer COFAR any seats.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Unknown's avatar
    Anonymous
    June 6, 2025 at 12:56 pm

    I am not going to write as “anonymous” because you need to know there is a real person here who is not afraid. My daughter who was autistic was sent to Hogan and when she came home had nightmares and begged us not to send her there again. The only way she was sent the second time was they took me to court to get a guardian for 3 months to take away my rights as her guardian. She did not even make it a month. Hogan does not allow family in, they said for the first month but even then it is very limited. I fought to be able to see my daughter on video chat and she looked all drugged out, that was the only way they could control her. They played with medications with her so much that it caused her to have a heart attack at age 29. After I demanded to see her records (which I am sure I was not sent everything) I found she had broken fingers which we were never informed of. My daughter was put on birth control several times and when she did come home, I took her off. Why do they do that, I wonder? My daughter did not even know what sex was. When she went in the first time, they would not allow us to bring in food for her. One of the things was pudding which she enjoyed. The food was slop and my daughter was a picky eater. How is dividing someone from their family something that helps an autistic adult who thrives around family? My daughter is gone now, six years ago. They (Hogan) the “guardian” and DDS were very uncaring. When I received the call, I immediately called the guardian and she said “Oh, I heard. Natural causes. Too bad.” The only thing DDS cared about was her check she got from disability. They wanted that signed over after her being there for two weeks even though it was supposed to be a “temporary” guardianship. Just know there are two sides to every story and there is a lot more to this one. I live to see the day when Hogan is shut down for good!

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  4. Unknown's avatar
    Anonymous
    June 14, 2025 at 4:22 pm

    I was employed at Monson Developmental Center for 15 yrs. until the facility was closed in 2012. I was then employed at a state operated group home for 8 yrs. I can honestly say that if I had a family member that had developmental disabilities, I would choose to have them placed at MDC. The care was exceptional and there was no room for abuse or neglect.

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