Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Sawsan Morrar

Under scrutiny after boy's death, school announces closure this week

SACRAMENTO, Calif. _ Guiding Hands School, the school under investigation over actions surrounding the death of 13-year-old Max Benson, announced it will close its doors forever Friday. The announcement was made Monday evening through a statement released by the school's attorney, Cynthia Lawrence.

The school's decision would allow another non-public school to take over El Dorado Hills facility and property, according to the school's statement. The new school would be able to hire former staffers. The move would also allow Guiding Hands' students to return.

The school came into the spotlight and was under investigation following the Nov. 28 death of Max, who died after being placed in a face-down restraint by school staff in November. The El Dorado Hills school incident sparked an investigation by the El Dorado County Sheriff's Department as well as the California Department of Education.

"Though GHS categorically denies the allegations asserted by the CDE in its premature Notice of Revocation, the decision to surrender our certification is in the best interest of and for the benefit of our students, their parents, and our staff," read the school statement.

The school, which contracts with multiple local school districts to provide educational services for kids with autism and other developmental issues, was suspended Dec. 5. The CDE found the school violated multiple rules by using the restraints on Max. It found the staff's actions were "harmful to the health, welfare or safety" of Max, and used an emergency intervention _ the prone restraint _ for "predictable behavior," according to the state's letter to the school

Max was restrained for 1 hour and 45 minutes, according to court documents obtained by The Sacramento Bee.

While the CDE does not have the authority to close a school, the December suspension prevented the school from accepting new students. On Jan. 9, the state decertified the school. More than a dozen districts began removing their students from the school, placing them in other non-public schools.

But two days later, Sacramento Superior Court Judge Richard K. Sueyoshi ruled to give state regulators two weeks to return with a completed investigation of Guiding Hands School. A court hearing was scheduled for Friday, but according to the school's letter, Guiding Hands notified the CDE it will "retire its Nonpublic Schools Certification" on Jan. 17.

CDE lawyers said the El Dorado County district attorney had also provided the agency with additional information and evidence that gave the CDE "great concern for the welfare of the public school students with disabilities who are currently placed at Guiding Hands School," according to court documents obtained by The Sacramento Bee.

Some of the 119 students stayed. But many students _ including 26 from Sacramento City Unified _ had already moved on to new schools, as district officials didn't want students to lose spots in a their new schools due to temporary extension.

The short stay was not long enough to save the school, according to the school statement.

"Understandably, many parents and districts need a level of security which the two-week stay could not provide," read the statement. "In the end, our loyalty is our students, parents, and devoted staff to offer them the opportunity to obtain security and stability."

This school has been open for 25 years and is run by administrators Starranne Meyers and Cindy Keller.

Melanie Stark, who pulled her nine-year-old son out of Guiding Hands School when news of Max's death broke, said she is concerned about what this closure means.

"Changing the top administrators and the name is not going to change the culture of restraints that's already established there," Stark said. "This doesn't feel like a resolution to me at all."

Guiding Hands School is currently the subject of three ongoing investigations by the state Department of Education, according to documents filed by the agency with Sacramento Superior Court on Jan. 11.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.