Friday, January 11, 2019

Vista Maria Is Back Trafficking Tiny Humans, Institutional Style, Again

Vista Maria is back, bigger, better, and ready to tap into that Medicaid expansion money.
Vista Maria
https://www.vistamaria.org/programs/

Yes, that is correct, the Madame Maura Corrigan and Robert Young, used to sit on the Board of Vista Maria while they presided over Michigan Supreme Court Cases of Vista Maria in termination of parental rights, so you automatically know who won.

Vista Maria.

Yes, this is the exact same Vista Maria that allowed a survivor of torture, a little boy they kidnapped and doped up as a lab rat for being "too happy" and eventually dying, at least 8 times, to get dumped on the front doorsteps of this human plantation, by St. Vincent Sarah Fisher Residential Institution, which was engaged is some hard core, black hearted, nefarious trafficking of tiny humans in the name of the tax exempt god schemes, that was run by Sister Dorothy Doyle, Sisters of the Good Shepherd, who know sits on its Board of Directors.

HUMAN TRAFFICKING, INSTITUTIONAL STYLE


Vista Maria.

Yes, this is the same exact Vista Maria institution that grows its own tiny humans as a result of its human trafficking when the girls on its Dearborn campus get pregnant when they are on weekend furloughs in search of human touch and a few dollars to buy some food, or an outfit, or just both.

Vista Maria.

Yes, the same exact place where they had partnered with some law school students out of Minnesota to fly into Detroit and try to talk to foster parents to come up with another kiddie kickback fraud scheme of trafficking tiny humans to convert its Dearborn Campus into a long term, full scale, contained environment, funded through Medicaid, to keep its chattel there until the age of 25 years.

Vista Maria.

Yes, the same exact institution that has periodic rashes of rape lawsuit settlements and unreported suicides of girls who just want to go back home.

Vista Maria.

Yes, not one person has been held accountable for its long and illustrious history of human trafficking, institutional style or Medicaid fraud in child welfare.

So, I shall assume, with the help of "The Boys" Vista Maria has finally found a way to maximize its revenues and create a public legal defense campaign to cover up its pending exposure to its trafficking tiny humans operations.

I shall also assume the new State of Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel has absolutely no intentions of holding any of these privatized actors of child welfare accountable because they funded her, and her rogue ass crew's 2018 campaign, and they were all mean to my Sweetie.

But, hey, what do I know.

I know it was the attorneys of Vista Maria who presented me with an apology from the Holy See when I busted them trafficking tiny humans.

On a mission...

Vista Maria Board of Directors - 2018

  • Lynn Quigley (Secretary) Retired, Ford Fund
  • Sr. Dorothy Doyle, Sisters of the Good Shepherd
  • James Bernacki (Member at Large) Comerica Bank
  • Norma Jean Evans, Cranbrook Educational Community
  • Bradley Gayton, Ford Motor Company
  • Josie Hunwick, Grant Thornton
  • Elizabeth James, Automotive Professional
  • Mary Beth Kelly, Bodman PLC
  • Paul Morris, Alix Partners
  • Patricia Pitts, Consultant
  • Jeffrey Sokolowski, Robert Half International
  • Gregory Spinazze, Wealth Strategies Partners
  • Carol Taylor, Amerisure Mutual, Insurance
  • Margaret Warner, Retired Director, Wayne County DHS
  • Mary Williams, Insurance Exchange, Agency, Inc.
  • Angela Aufdemberge, President & CEO

Vista Maria to build human trafficking stabilization center on its Dearborn campus




  • Agency to break ground this spring
  • New center will include first-of-its kind emergency intake wing, 16-bed treatment housing
  • Facility will improve and expand services for young female victims
Vista Maria plans to break ground this spring on a new human trafficking stabilization center to improve and expand services for young female victims.

Scheduled to open in early 2020, the new $4.6 million stabilization center will be located on Vista Maria's 37-acre Dearborn campus with the Aaron and Helen L. DeRoy Hall, Vista Maria's existing 16-bed treatment housing for female victims of human trafficking.

The new Aaron and Helen L. DeRoy Stabilization Treatment Center will provide residential treatment housing for up to 16 girls, doubling Vista Maria's current capacity, and a first-of-its-kind emergency intake wing to provide services for up to three rescued adolescent girls.

The small-scale trauma response center will provide physical and mental health care to young victims, with best practices gleaned from child advocacy centers and input from staff, clinical practitioners, human trafficking survivors and law enforcement.


The nearly 14,000-square-foot center will also include 16 residential beds, expanding Vista Maria's ability to provide longer-term treatment for victims.

Founded in 1883, Vista Maria provides residential therapeutic programming, foster care, transitional living for youth who have aged out of foster care and/or are homeless, and community-based education programs.

Of the 130 at-risk girls it's housing on its campus, 20


Last year, the agency served a total of 60 human trafficking victims. As one of only a few agencies contracted by the state of Michigan to provide care for adolescent female victims of human trafficking, Vista Maria gets daily referrals and takes in victims from Washtenaw, Genesee, Calhoun, Kent and Ingham counties, Aufdemberge said.

"Today I'm taking beds from children with other mental health needs, turning them away, in order to provide beds to young victims of human trafficking," she said.

Even then, the agency can only help so many victims because of capacity constraints, Aufdemberge said. Without a bed or family to return to, many girls who are rescued are taken to a shelter, "and that's not safe for them," she said.

Other girls are placed in more general treatment programs that may not address their unique needs, Aufdemberge said, noting Vista Maria has a waiting list for human trafficking victims seeking residential treatment on its campus.

Beyond increased capacity, the new center will improve the quality of care. Typically, after rescue, victims spend up to 48 hours going to law enforcement, medical and psychiatric treatment sites before they return to their families or are placed in residential treatment housing, Aufdemberge said.
"Law enforcement, medical providers and psychiatry will all come to this place where these girls are instead of them being dragged around the city," she said.

The new center will be named in recognition of a $750,000 grant from the DeRoy Testamentary Foundation. The foundation's namesakes, Aaron and Helen DeRoy, were Pittsburgh natives who moved to Detroit and founded the Aaron DeRoy Motor Car Co. in 1923 to distribute Hudson and Essex brand automobiles for the Hudson Motor Co. and to operate retail dealerships.

Vista Maria,which is operating on a $25.5 million budget for fiscal 2019, has raised $2.4 million of its projected $4.6 million cost. Other support for the project includes a $500,000 forgivable loan from the Federal Home Loan Bank of Indianapolis, $500,000 grants from the Carls Foundation and McGregor Fund and additional support from the Abhi Shah Foundation in Novi, the Washington, D.C.-based Seed Foundation, NorthRidge Church, Vista Maria board members and others.

Th new human trafficking stabilization center will fill a critical void by offering a safe, secure, centralized facility for victim care and restoration, said McGregor Fund President Kate Levin Markel.
"Building on the trauma-informed approach to care that Vista Maria has developed over many years, the center will provide services in a trauma-informed and person-centered manner, which we know to be the best approach to help victims restore their lives."

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

No comments: