SABILLASVILLE, Md. – Following a meeting with Department
of Juvenile Services Secretary Donald Devore, many Sabillasville
area residents said they would wait to see if the state follows
through with promises made during the meeting about the re-opening
of Victor Cullen Academy for juvenile offenders.
Devore
answered questions during the meeting hosted by the Northwestern
Frederick County Civic Association at Sabillasville Elementary
School on Monday, April 10.
Approximately
100 people will be employed by the facility and plans are
currently under way to try and open by this summer. This
year’s state budget allocates around $6.8 million
dollars to refurbish the academy.
Devore
asked residents to volunteer to participate in a committee
to help draft a memorandum of understanding between area
residents and the state, putting the promises the state
makes to the community in writing.
“…I
also know that the history of Victor Cullen was one where
a lot of promises were made to this community… not
meeting expectations relative to the protection of the community
and the safety within the facility,” Devore said.
But
he promised a “new day” with a substantial budget
allocation from the state to handle the re-opening appropriately
and address the concerns of the community.
Around
50 people attended the meeting, in addition to reporters
and several of Devore’s staff. Members of the civic
association and others came to hear the plan for re-opening
the academy for the third time. Managed at the time by a
private company, Victor Cullen was closed for the second
time in 2002 when concerns for the safety of the juveniles
came to light.
During
his speech, Devore made a commitment that the new facility
would house no more than 48 residents, a substantial reduction
from the over 200 juveniles formerly housed there. That
particular announcement made a few people, including civic
association president George Khun, say that made them feel
a little better.
Devore’s
proposal includes a change in the state’s plan for
juveniles that involves creating several small regional
treatment facilities around the state rather than sending
the juveniles to large facilities or, as is so often the
case, to out-of-state facilities far from home and family.
Devore
also announced that the facility’s juveniles would
predominately be ages 13 to 17 and would not have committed
any seriously violent crimes, such as murder, rape or child
molestation.
Security
was of particular concern to area residents who reminded
the secretary of incidents where the juveniles escaped in
the past.
Assistant
Secretary James Smith, in charge of residential programs,
responded to that concern by saying there would be electronic
surveillance of the grounds, a staff member who will walk
the perimeter every two hours, and special mesh fence that
is impossible to climb.
Though
Devore’s promises and demeanor eased some discomfort,
it was not enough for residents to forget the past. Many
residents stressed their concerns for their safety and their
families’ safety during the meeting. Following the
meeting, several residents, like Mary Rae Cantwell, weren’t
ready yet to buy into the state’s promises.
“Wait
and see,” Cantwell said when asked her opinion of
the evening’s meeting. “Wait and see.”