Crime and Justice

DCF moves temporary Woodside facility from St. Albans after escapes

mental health
The Middlesex mental health facility. File photo by Andrew Stein

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The Department for Children and Families is moving its temporary juvenile detention facility from a converted office space in St. Albans, where two escaped earlier this week, to a seven-bed secure residential facility in Middlesex. 

The department had moved the youth who had been held at the Woodside Juvenile Rehabilitation Center in Essex to the St. Albans facility last week to make room at the Essex site for psychiatric patients with COVID-19 symptoms.

On April 6, the department will move the youth to the Middlesex Therapeutic Community Residence

The move comes after officials learned they could not install security infrastructure, including alarms and locks, in the St. Albans space. 

DCF Commissioner Ken Schatz told lawmakers on Tuesday that one youth was back in custody. However, a DCF spokesperson said Friday that two youth were at large.  

“The St. Albans space was not able to be fitted with the security measures needed for this level of programming,” DCF said in a statement Friday. 

Schatz told lawmakers this week that the department was looking for a new facility. 

He said the St. Albans facility’s landlord told state officials they could not make security upgrades after they had made the move.  

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“Frankly, we’re looking for another facility because we did think that we would be able to lock the doors and put alarms on the windows,” Schatz said. 

According to a DCF statement the Middlesex Therapeutic Community Residence “offers outdoor areas including a recreational area and interior spaces for activities, creativity, and wellness.” 

One of the two living rooms at the Department of Mental Health’s new transitional living facility in Middlesex. File photo by Andrew Stein

“It is hardware secure with locked doors and perimeter fencing,” the statement added.

The previous occupants of the Middlesex Therapeutic Community Residence were adults in a “short-term residential stabilization program,” according to DCF. 

On March 31, those youth were moved to a unit within the Vermont Psychiatric Care Hospital in Berlin. 

Up to five males in the juvenile detention or corrections systems between 13 and 18 can be housed in the facility. 

There are three youth currently being held at the St. Albans facility, and two of them will be moved to the Middlesex facility. 

DCF is looking to find another placement for the third youth, who is not in the state’s juvenile justice system. 

Correction: The previous occupants of the Middlesex Therapeutic Community Residence were adults, not youths.

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Xander Landen

About Xander

Xander Landen is VTDigger's political reporter. He previously worked at the Keene Sentinel covering crime, courts and local government. Xander got his start in public radio, writing and producing stories for NPR affiliates including WBUR in Boston and WNYC in New York. While at WNYC, he contributed to an award-winning investigation of how police departments shield misconduct records from the public. He is a graduate of Tufts University and his work has also appeared in PBS NewsHour and The Christian Science Monitor.

Email: [email protected]

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