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An overlooked but vitally important book on the history of institutional care in Massachusetts
Among the books that anyone interested in the continuum of care for persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD) should not miss is Ingrid Grenon’s meticulously researched “From One Century to the Next: A history of Wrentham State School and the Institutional Model in Massachusetts.”
I hope the controversial Special Commission on State Institutions, which is due to release a report on the history of institutional care in Massachusetts next June, has a copy of this book. While the book can be purchased online, it is also available in libraries.
I have to confess to having missed this book, which was published in 2015, until Grenon contacted me a few weeks ago. Having now read it, I realize it makes a powerful case that institutions, in themselves, are neither good nor bad. It is how they are run that counts, just as is the case in any care setting.
As this book documents, the high point of the care and services at Wrentham — prior to the advent of the modern Intermediate Care Facility (ICF) model in the 1980s — was during the 1920s.
The 1920s, exactly a century ago, 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. Wallace displayed a genuine interest in helping them lead meaningful and productive lives.
But, as the book shows, 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. By 1960, Wrentham, which was intended to house no more than 1,500 residents, had a residential population of 2,400. Today, less than 160 residents remain there.
Wrentham and other state schools in Massachusetts were finally brought back to excellence as a result of the Ricci v. Okin class action litigation in the 1970s and the intervention of the late U.S. District Court Judge Joseph L. Tauro.
A refutation of the ideology behind deinstitutionalization
Based on that historical arc, I think the book offers a compelling refutation of the longstanding and dominant ideology used to support deinstitutionalization. That ideology is based on the premise that all institutional care is bad and outdated, and that that characteristic never changes and can never change.
The book, however, shows, on a year-by-year basis, how one institution – Wrentham — progressed from very good to very bad, and back again. Wrentham did change, and it changed dramatically. It is clear that if an institution is well run and has sufficient resources, it can be a positive and even necessary option for residential care.
Grenon’s book also shows how the ongoing debate over institutional versus community-based care was central to the thinking even of Walter Fernald and Wallace way back in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
What was later to become the Fernald Developmental Center was established in 1848 as the first institution in the United States for persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities. It was later named for Walter Fernald, who became its first superintendent. The then Wrentham State School was officially opened in 1910.
Grenon’s book demonstrates that it’s not a simple proposition that the Fernald and Wrentham schools were meant to be segregated facilities, intended to keep people with intellectual disabilities out of the view of the general public. Even for Walter Fernald and George Wallace, there were two ways of looking at their facilities.
The centers could be seen from the perspective of the now discredited science of eugenics, as places to separate people with I//DD from the general population. Or they could be seen, as Wallace viewed them and Fernald later came to view them, as places where people with I/DD could be helped to lead meaningful and fulfilling lives. Unfortunately, the prevailing view today is that that former perspective regarding institutions is the only valid one.
Bellotti and Dukakis changed the game
Grenon documents Wrentham’s history virtually year by year from the early 1900s until 1993 when Judge Tauro officially disengaged from the Ricci litigation. It includes many photos from throughout that period.
In addition to consulting numerous primary sources, Grenon interviewed many key figures in the history of Wrentham and of institutional care in Massachusetts. Among those were former Governor Michael Dukakis and his then Attorney General Francis Bellotti.
Bellotti, who died yesterday (December 17) at the age of 101, took the unusual and courageous step in response to the Ricci lawsuit of refusing to defend the conditions at Wrentham, Fernald, Belchertown and the other state schools in the 1970s.
As Grenon explains, Bellotti’s refusal as attorney general to defend the administration – a position that Dukakis fully supported – meant the state would cooperate with the plaintiffs in the case. Those plaintiffs included Ben Ricci, who had brought the original lawsuit on behalf of his son, who was a resident of the then Belchertown State School.
Founding of COFAR
Grenon also interviewed John Sullivan, one of the founders of COFAR, whose daughter, Colleen Lutkevich, continues to work with this organization.
Sullivan, who died in 2017, told Grenon in 2012 that he had helped start COFAR in 1984 as a counter to the Massachusetts Arc and to Rhode Island Senator John Chaffee, both of whom were pushing to close all of the state schools and transfer all of the residents to privately run, community-based group homes.
Sullivan and other like-minded advocates, including Ricci, Charles Hart, Richard Krant, and Louise Johnson, believed that the improvements brought about by the Ricci litigation had transformed Wrentham and the other state schools into the best possible settings for their loved ones by the mid-1980s.
Personal experiences
But Grenon’s book is based on more than historical research and even interviews. She also recounts her own experiences at Wrentham, having worked there for 34 years in a variety of capacities, starting in 1981. Her personal descriptions draw the reader into the day-to-day life and drama of the institution during her time, and add to the context and richness of the center’s history.
Grenon started working at Wrentham after graduating from college with a degree in psychology. Her first job was as a direct care worker, a position referred to at the time as a “Mental Retardation Assistant.” She spent most of the next four years with the “heavy hitters” — women in the D Building who were given that appellation because they had behavioral problems.
In 1982, Grenon was promoted to ward supervisor, and then became building manager, and later back-up shift supervisor and crisis responder.
In 1985, because of her separate degree in equestrian science, she became director of a new therapeutic horseback riding program at Wrentham. And from 1992 until 2014, she served as a coordinator in public relations at Wrentham and as a community liaison.
In 2016, Grenon discussed her book and emerging therapies and models of care for people with I/DD in a series of interviews, including this one.
Opposition from DDS
But as Grenon explained to me, the Department of Developmental Services (DDS) was not happy with her book. She said that when top DDS administrators learned she was writing it, they wanted her to emphasize only “the most egregious” aspects of Wrentham’s history.
The reason for DDS’s position is clear. Since the 1990s, a succession of administrations in Massachusetts has been intent on shutting down state-run residential care and privatizing the services. But Grenon told the Department officials she wanted to tell the whole history of Wrentham, both good and bad.
The result, she said, was that she was repeatedly threatened by DDS with termination in the last few years of her employment, and was later even banned from visiting the campus.
Grenon said that at a meeting with the DDS administrators in 2013, “They all wanted to know why I wanted to present the facility in a positive light, and I told them something like, ‘up until now, everything that has ever been written about facilities has been very negative. I’ve found some surprising evidence to the contrary and I want to present it. I don’t just want to regurgitate egregious conditions, I want to present facts.’”
Grenon said, though, that the reply from one of the administrators at the meeting was, “’We would really rather that you present the egregious conditions. . .’” She said she was also told “not to make the facility look good.”
As we’ve argued before, it is vitally important to study the history of the care of persons with I/DD in Massachusetts and elsewhere, if only to avoid repeating the mistakes of the past. It is just as important to recount the entire history, and, as Grenon said, to present the facts.
It is only in recounting the full and complete history of any person, event, trend or institution that valid conclusions can be drawn as to the meaning of the past and how to plan for the future. That is what Grenon sought to do in writing her book; and, in our view, she fully succeeded.
DDS hearing officer won’t allow COFAR blog post to be submitted as evidence in couple’s effort to place son at the Wrentham Center
A Department of Developmental Services (DDS) hearing officer has denied a couple’s request to submit a COFAR blog post to him for consideration as part of their appeal to place their son at the Wrentham Developmental Center.
The June 15 COFAR post claims, among other things, that federal law requires DDS to give individuals a choice of care in a facility such as the Wrentham Center. DDS primarily informs people looking for residential settings only of the existence of corporate provider-run group homes.
The couple, who have asked that their names not be used, requested that they be allowed to submit COFAR’s post in rebuttal to a DDS closing brief in the case. The DDS brief claimed that people with intellectual disabilities do not have a right to care at facilities such as Wrentham.
Last October, the couple appealed their son’s DDS Individual Support Plan (ISP) to the Department in an effort to have him placed at Wrentham. DDS held a hearing on the couple’s appeal on April 21 after the Department denied the requested placement. Under the ISP appeal regulations, the Department appointed a hearing officer in the couple’s case.
The hearing officer, William O’Connell, has not yet issued a decision on the appeal. His July 11 order denying consideration of the June 15 COFAR blog post stated that the post was submitted after his June 2 deadline for closing submissions in the case. However, O’Connell had previously extended that deadline to allow DDS to submit its closing brief on June 5.
Despite submitting its own brief under that extension, DDS subsequently opposed the couple’s request to have the COFAR rebuttal similarly entered into the record.
Hearing officer’s ruling is taken almost verbatim from DDS attorney’s objection
DDS’s written objection to the COFAR post described the post as “a late Rebuttal to the Department’s closing argument and brief,” and as “new evidence and argument that was not presented during the hearing or in the parties’ final closings.”
The DDS objection then stated that, “The (COFAR) evidence, a public opinion blog post, is of little probative value, and would likely not be admissible even if it were not filed late.”
Key portions of O’Connell’s written order about the COFAR blog post appear to have been taken almost word-for-word from DDS’s objection. O’Connell stated in his July 11 order that:
The (couple) submitted the rebuttal (COFAR post) well after the deadline for closing submissions had passed. Notwithstanding that the record was closed for evidentiary purposes at the close of the hearing on April 21, the proposed rebuttal to the DDS closing brief that the (couple) are attempting to submit as evidence and argument is a public opinion blog that is not probative and has no foundation for admissibility” (my emphasis).
Couple believes the hearing officer is biased against them
The couple maintain that O’Connell’s reliance in his order on the language in the DDS objection to the blog post appears to be evidence of a bias on his part in favor of DDS. They noted that he didn’t dispute any claim made in the post itself, but simply repeated DDS’s assertions about it.
The couple, who were not represented at the hearing by an attorney, also contended that O’Connell treated them with impatience during the April 21 hearing, and was deferential to DDS. “During the hearing, the hearing officer interrupted me several times and asked me to ‘get to the point,’” the wife said. “However, the DDS attorney was able to say her piece without interruption.”
The couple said they feel their case was “quite strong” at the hearing. But they said they are so certain their appeal will ultimately be denied by O’Connell that they are already planning their next move, which will be to take their case to state Superior Court to get their son into Wrentham.
If the couple are right about O’Connell’s likely decision, it will be interesting to see whether he primarily relies on the DDS closing brief in writing that decision, as he did with their request to submit our blog post into the record.
Unclear why DDS controls ISP appeal hearings
As noted above, DDS is in charge of the ISP appeal process, and even appoints the hearing officer who issues a recommended decision in each case. The final decision on the appeal is made by the DDS commissioner. We would agree that this creates, at best, a perception that the process is biased in favor of the Department.
We think the ISP appeal process should be decided by the independent Division of Administrative Law Appeals (DALA), which conducts appeal hearings for more than 20 state agencies, including the Disabled Persons Protection Commission (DPPC).
Hearing officer provided no support for claim that COFAR post was inadmissible
O’Connell stated that his order denying admission of the COFAR post was issued pursuant to the Massachusetts statute and regulations on adjudicatory practice and procedure (M.G.L. 30A and 801 CMR 1.02.)
We believe, however, that those rules would allow the post to be entered into the case record at any time, just as the DDS closing brief was entered after the hearing officer’s arbitrary closing date for submissions.
The regulations that O’Connell cited as underlying his ruling (801 CMR 1.02) constitute “informal rules” of adjudicatory procedure in Massachusetts.
Also, M.G.L.c. 30A, s. 11 states, with regard to the admissibility of evidence, that:
Unless otherwise provided by any law, agencies need not observe the rules of evidence observed by courts, but shall observe the rules of privilege recognized by law. Evidence may be admitted and given probative effect only if it is the kind of evidence on which reasonable persons are accustomed to rely in the conduct of serious affairs. Agencies may exclude unduly repetitious evidence, whether offered on direct examination or cross-examination of witnesses.
(3) Every party shall have the right to call and examine witnesses, to introduce exhibits, to cross-examine witnesses who testify, and to submit rebuttal evidence.
As we argue below, the COFAR blog post was intended to present evidence on which reasonable persons would rely in the conduct of serious affairs. It was not intended, as DDS and O’Connell casually dismissed it, to be a “public opinion blog.”
Both DDS and the hearing officer mischaracterized the nature of the COFAR blog post
As noted above, both DDS and O’Connell characterized the COFAR blog post as “a public opinion blog that is not probative and has no foundation for admissibility.”
However, the blog post directly rebutted the DDS assertion in its closing brief that federal law does not give persons with intellectual or developmental disabilities the right to placement at either the Wrentham Developmental Center or the Hogan Regional Center.
The post presented new evidence in the case regarding a succession of administrations in Massachusetts, which have allowed the residential population or census at the Wrentham and Hogan centers to decline. This decline, the post noted, has been due to DDS’s apparent policies of denying admission to those facilities to most persons who ask for it, and failing to inform persons looking for placements that those facilities exist as residential options.
We think the blog post therefore helped explain the almost automatic denial by DDS of the couple’s request to have their son placed at Wrentham.
Secondly, the blog post directly rebutted a statement in the DDS closing brief that the couple’s son currently lives in “a less restrictive community-based setting” than he would in an Intermediate Care Facility (ICF) such as the Wrentham Center.
The blog post then presented evidence that directly rebutted the DDS closing brief’s statement that the couple’s son “…has been successfully supported in the community for 13 years,” and that “he is well served by his community-based services and supports.”
Finally, the blog post revealed a misrepresentation in the DDS closing brief of the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1999 Olmstead v. L.C. decision with regard to institutional care. The post explained how the brief had wrongly implied that the Court had held that in all cases, individuals should be placed in community-based rather than institutional settings.
The statute that governs adjudicatory practice and procedure (M.G.L. c.30A, s.11), states that:
In all cases of delayed statement, or where subsequent amendment of the issues is necessary, sufficient time shall be allowed after full statement or amendment to afford all parties reasonable opportunity to prepare and present evidence and argument respecting the issues.
In our view, the couple were denied a reasonable opportunity to present evidence and argument in response to the evidence and argument in the DDS closing brief.
For all of the reasons discussed above, we believe the hearing officer erred in his denial of the couple’s request that the COFAR blog post be entered into evidence in their appeal.
