From late 2007 through 2008, a broad coalition of
grass roots efforts, prominent
medical and
psychological organizations that included members of CAFETY, provided testimony and support that led to the creation of the
Stop Child Abuse in Residential Programs for Teens Act of 2008 by the
United States Congress Committee on Education and Labor. In support of this effort, Jon Martin-Crawford, a member of the group's board of directors and Kathryn Whitehead, the group's executive director, appeared at a hearing before the
United States Congress Committee on Education and Labor on April 24, 2008, where they described abusive practices they had experienced at the
Family Foundation School and
Mission Mountain School, both
therapeutic boarding schools. On February 19, 2009, CAFETY co-sponsored a press briefing on Capitol Hill in an effort to raise awareness of youth maltreatment in residential care. In October 2009, the CAFETY sent an unsolicited mass-mailing to 4,000 residents of
Delaware County, using a mailing list compiled by "going through the white pages of Delaware County phone books" alerting the residents of abuse allegations at a local therapeutic boarding school called the
Family Foundation School. The two page mailing included a page of excerpts from alumni testimony alleging abuse. The allegations in the letter were dismissed by Jeff Brain, the Family Foundation School's vice president for external relations and acting director of admissions by telling a newspaper that "all the allegations are categorically untrue or grossly exaggerated ... and determined to be unfounded." CAFETY and its members also held a teens' rights rally held in
Gainesville, Florida. At the rally, Chris Noroski, vice president of CAFETY, stated that while he was at the Family Foundation School in
Hancock, New York, he was mentally and physically abused, stating "For seven months of the time, I carried buckets of rocks back and forth". On April 5, 2011, CAFETY was quoted in an article for
Time called "Increasingly, Internet Activism Helps Shutter Abusive 'Troubled Teen' Boot Camps". CAFETY, along with the
American Psychological Association,
Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law, American Academy of Child and Adolescent Therapy, and the
American Bar Association, was a major supporter of the bill H.R 911, "Stop Child Abuse in Residential Programs for Teens Act", which was introduced in the
U.S. Congress in 2009 and passed in the
House of Representatives, but was not acted upon in the
Senate and did not become law. ==See also==