‘They are just like any other child’
Jessica Garrison
NEWPORT-MESA -- After only six days of school, teacher Bill
Klooster said he already feels tremendously protective of the boys in his
class.
Ten of the 11 students in Klooster’s special day class, which he
co-teaches with his wife, Connie, are among more than 150 students in the
Newport-Mesa area who live not with their parents, but in state-funded
group homes.
Klooster said he fears that rising community concern over the number
of group homes in Costa Mesa will cause hostility toward his students,
who live in a Newport Beach residential treatment center for severely
emotionally disturbed children.
According to a city report released Monday, there are 86
state-licensed homes in Costa Mesa, serving a whole spectrum of society’s
unwanted -- from the developmentally disabled, recovering addicts and
homeless to battered women, senior citizens and foster children.
Costa Mesa, the report revealed, has far more group homes per 100,000
residents than any other city in Orange County. Armed with that
statistic, some residents have called for the city to limit the number of
group homes allowed.
Klooster, along with other school officials and group home directors,
said people should be more accepting of children in group homes, many of
whom have been abused and abandoned by their parents.
And some have continued to suffer once in the relative safety of a
group home. In one infamous case, a young man living at New Alternatives
Inc. group home in Costa Mesa was sexually abused by his psychiatrist,
Burnell Forgey, and the psychiatrist’s roommate, convicted sex offender
James Lee Crummel. Crummel was sentenced Friday to 60 years to life in
prison for that crime.
“Those of us who are on the front lines with these children don’t have
the same biases toward them,” Klooster said.
His students -- with their shy, polite smiles and their baggy pants --
are just like normal teenagers, he said.
Insecure. Vulnerable. Capable of heartbreaking sweetness one minute
and terrible errors of judgment the next.
But many people fear them, he said, in part because of what they
represent about society.
“Our society is deteriorating because of a loss of family values,”
Klooster said. “These kids are symbolic of that. The breakdown of family
is to many people the breakdown of society.”
Bonnie Swan, the district’s head of special education, said most
children who live in group homes slip unnoticed into the stream of
activities at district schools.
They go to class. Many play on the football team at Costa Mesa High
School. They generate average daily attendance monies for the school
district.
There are things they can’t do, however. The students in Klooster’s
class are shepherded onto a school bus at the end of each day, and then
ushered behind the closed doors of their facility. They are not allowed
to wander the streets on their own.
Many group homes don’t allow their charges to attend slumber parties,
or stay out late on Friday nights, or watch television for hours on end.
A sizable minority of group home residents are special education
students, Swan said. And there are students who educators believe cannot
handle regular school. For those students, the district offers special
classes, like Klooster’s, or sends students to special schools, like one
that South Coast Children’s Society operates in Newport Beach.
Swan said she is glad Newport-Mesa is such a welcoming place, although
she sometimes wishes the city of Costa Mesa could warn the school
district when a new group home opens, so the district can get ready for
the children.
“It’s a sad place to be, in a group home. Even a good group home,”
said South Coast Director Richard Sewell. South Coast also operates four
group homes in Costa Mesa. “They are wonderful kids. They are just like
any other child, but they’ve been put in a position, not as a fault of
their own, but as fault of their parents.”
It is true there are children who live in group homes who are violent,
disruptive and angry. But educators say they are a small minority.
Not everyone agrees. Many, from Planning Commissioner Katrina Foley to
residents speaking at City Council meetings, have suggested that the
children -- who are wards of the state -- can be noisy, obnoxious and a
threat to property and even neighbors’ personal safety.
Sewell said sadly, he is accustomed to the discrimination his children
face.
“I know a couple of occasions where our children have come home crying
from school as a result of being teased about their living situation,” he
said.
But he added that, in general, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach are ideal
locations for group homes.
“This area offers children opportunities that could be difficult to
find in other areas of the county,” he said. “Employment. Quality
schools. Shady streets.”
And, he said, a school system that welcomes and supports his children.
“Newport-Mesa is really exceptional,” he said.
Peggy Young, who operates six group homes for foster children in
Orange County, including one for severely emotionally disturbed girls in
Costa Mesa, said the proximity to social services in the city makes it an
ideal place to open a group home.
Young added that she herself would feel some trepidation about living
near a group home for adults, but that homes for children are an entirely
different story.
Many girls have graduated from her program and gone on to college, and
even to graduate school, she said.
“You don’t hear the good stories,” she said. “You only hear the
terrible stories.”
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